B'dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... Vs Union of India and Others On 24 October, 1994'

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 57

Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ...

vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

Supreme Court of India


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994
Equivalent citations: AIR 1995 SC 605 A
Bench: M V Verma, G Ray, S Bharucha
ORDER

1. We have just enough religion to make us hate, but not enough to make us love one another." -
Jonathan Swift

2. Swami Vivekananda said -

Religion is not in doctrines, in dogmas, nor in intellectual argumentation; it is being and becoming,
it is realisation.

This thought comes to mind as we contemplate the roots of this controversy. Genesis of this dispute
is traceable to erosion of some fundamental values of the plural commitments of our polity.

3. The constitutional validity of the Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act, 1993 (No. 33 of
1993) (hereinafter referred to as "Act No. 33 of 1993" or "the Act") and the maintainability of Special
Reference No. 1 of 1993 (hereinafter referred to as "the Special Reference") made by the President of
India under Article 143(1) of the Constitution of India are the questions for decision herein. The
background in which these questions are to be answered is contained in the facts stated in the White
Paper on Ayodhya, February 1993, issued by the Government of India.

4. Certain undisputed facts emerging at the hearing may also have relevance for this purpose. These
questions are answered on this basis, eschewing facts which are in the area of controversy and have
yet to be adjudicated.

BACKGROUND

5. The Bill was introduced in Parliament leading to the above enactment and the said Reference to
this Court was made in the historical background set out in the White Paper. Indeed, the two
simultaneous acts are an indication of the legislative intent for enactment of the statute, the
reference being made as a part of the same exercise with a view "to effectuate the purpose of the
enactment. This is how, they have to be viewed.

6. The "Overview" at the commencement of the White Paper in Chapter 1 states thus:-

1.1 Ayodhya situated in the north of India is a township in District Faizabad of Uttar Pradesh. It has
long been a place of holy pilgrimage because of its mention in the epic Ramayana as the place of
birth of Shri Ram. The structure commonly known as Ram Janma Bhoomi-Babri Masjid was erected
as a mosque by one Mir Baqi in Ayodhya in 1528 A.D. It is claimed by some sections that it was built
at the site believed to be the birth-spot of Shri Ram where a temple had stood earlier. This resulted
in a long-standing dispute.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 1


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

1.2 The controversy entered a new phase with the placing of idols in the disputed structure in
December, 1949. The premises were attached under Section 145 of the CrPC. Civil suits were filed
shortly thereafter. Interim orders in these civil suits restrained the parties from removing the idols
or interfering with their worship. In effect, therefore, from December, 1949 till December 6, 1992
the structure had not been used as a mosque.

7. The movement to construct a Ram-temple at the site of the disputed structure gathered
momentum in recent years which became a matter of great controversy and a source of tension. This
led to several parleys the details of which are not very material for the present purpose. These
parleys involving the Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) and the All India Babri Masjid Action
Committee (AIBMAC), however, failed to resolve the dispute. A new dimension was added to the
campaign for construction of the temple with the formation of the Government in Uttar Pradesh in
June 1991 by the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) which declared its commitment to the construction of
the temple and took certain steps like the acquisition of land adjoining the disputed structure while
leaving out the disputed structure itself from the acquisition. The focus of the temple construction
movement from October 1991 was to start construction of the temple by way of 'kar-sewa' on the
land acquired by the Government of Uttar Pradesh while leaving the disputed structure intact. This
attempt did not succeed and there was litigation in the Allahabad High Court as well as in this
Court. There was a call for resumption of kar sewa from 6th December, 1992 and the announcement
made by the organisers was for a symbolic kar sewa without violation of the court orders including
those made in the proceedings pending in this Court. In spite of initial reports from Ayodhya on 6th
December, 1992 indicating an air of normalcy, around mid-day a crowd addressed by leaders of BJP,
VHP, etc., climbed the Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid (RJB-BM) structure and started damaging
the domes. Within a short time, the entire structure was demolished and razed to the ground.
Indeed, it was an act of "national shame". What was demolished was not merely an ancient
structure; but "the faith of the minorities in the sense of justice and fair play of majority. It shook
their faith in the rule of law and constitutional processes. A five hundred year old structure which
was defenceless and whose safety was a sacred trust in the hands of the State Government was
demolished.

8. After referring to the details on this tragedy, the White Paper in Chapter 1 on "OVERVIEW"
concludes thus :-

1.35. The demolition of the Ram Janma Bhoomi-Babri Masjid structure at Ayodhya on 6th
December, 1992 was a most reprehensible act. The perpetrators of this deed struck not only against
a place of worship, but also at the principles of secularism, democracy and the rule of law enshrined
in our Constitution. In a move as sudden as it was shameful, a few thousand people managed to
outrage the sentiments of millions of Indians of all communities who have reacted to this incident
with anguish and dismay.

1.36 What happened on December 6, 1992 was not a failure of the system as a whole, nor of the
wisdom inherent in India's Constitution, nor yet of the power of tolerance, brotherhood and
compassion that has so vividly informed the life of independent India. It was, the Supreme Court
observed on that day, "a great pity that a Constitutionally elected Government could not discharge

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 2


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

its duties in a matter of this sensitiveness and magnitude." Commitments to the Court and
Constitution, pledges to Parliament and the people, were simply cast aside. Therein lay the failure,
therein the betrayal.

1.37 Today India seeks to heal, and not reopen its wounds; to look forward with hope, and not
backwards with fear; to reconcile reason with faith. Above all, India is determined to press ahead
with the National Agenda, undeterred by aberrations.

9. It may be mentioned that a structure called the Ram-chabutra stood on the disputed site within
the courtyard of the disputed structure. This structure also was demolished on 6th December, 1992
(Appendix-V to the White Paper). Worship of the idols installed on the Ram-chabutra by Hindu
devotees in general, it appears, had been performed for a considerable period of time without any
objection by the Muslims to its worship at that place, prior to the shifting of the idols from the
Ram-chabutra to the disputed structure in December 1949. As a result of demolition of
Ram-chabutra also on 6th December 1992, the worship by Hindus in general even at that place was
interrupted. Thereafter, the worship of idols is being performed only by a priest nominated for the
purpose without access to the public.

10. A brief reference to certain suits in this connection may now be made. In 1950, two suits were
filed by some Hindus; in one of these suits in January 1950. the trial court passed interim orders
whereby the idols remained at the place where they were installed in December 1949 and their Puja
by the Hindus continued. The interim order was confirmed by the High Court in April 1955. On 1st
February, 1986, the District Judge ordered the opening of the lock placed on a grill leading to the
sanctum-sanctorum of the shrine in the disputed structure and permitted Puja by the Hindu
devotees. In 1959, a suit was filed by the Nirmohi Akhara claiming title to the disputed structure. In
1961, another suit was filed claiming title to the disputed structure by the Sunni Central Wakf Board.
In 1989, Deoki Nandan Agrawal, as the next friend of the Deity filed a title suit in respect of the
disputed structure. In 1989, the aforementioned suits were transferred to the Allahabad High Court
and were ordered to be heard together. On 14th August, 1989. the High Court ordered the
maintenance of status quo in respect of the disputed structure (Appendix-I to the White Paper). As
earlier mentioned, it is stated in para 1.2 of the White Paper that:

interim orders in these civil suits restrained the parties from removing the idols or interfering with
their worship. In effect, therefore, from December, 1949 till December 6, 1992 the structure had not
been used as a mosque.

11. Prior to December 1949 when the idols were shifted into the disputed structure from the
Ram-chabutra, worship by Hindu devotees at the Ram-chabutra for a long time without any
objection from Muslims is also beyond controversy. A controversy, however, is raised about use of
the disputed structure as a mosque from 1934 to December 1949. One version is that after some
disturbances in 1934, the use of the disputed structure as a mosque had been stopped from 1934
itself and not merely from December 1949. The other side disputes the alleged disuse of the mosque
for prayers prior to December 1949. The stand of the Uttar Pradesh Government in the suits was
that the place was used as a mosque till 1949.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 3


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

12. As a result of the incidents at Ayodhya on 6th December, 1992, the President of India issued a
proclamation under Article 356 of the Constitution of India assuming to himself all the functions of
the Government of Uttar Pradesh, dissolving the U.P. Vidhan Sabha. The White Paper in Chapter II
mentions the "BACKGROUND" and therein it is stated as under:

2.1 At the center of the. RJB-BM dispute is the demand voiced by Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP)
and its allied organisations for the restoration of a site said to be the birth place of Sri Ram in
Ayodhya. Till 6th December, 1992 this site was occupied by the structure erected in 1528 by 'Mir
Baqi' who claimed to have built it on; orders of the first Mughal Emperor Babar; This structure has
been described in the old Government records as Masjid Janmasthan. It is now commonly retired to
as Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid.

2.2 The VHP and its allied organisations base their demand on the assertion that this site is the birth
place of Sri Ram and a Hindu temple commemorating this site stood here till it was destroyed on
Babar's command and a Masjid was erected in its place. The demand of the VHP has found support
from the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP). The construction of a Ram temple at the disputed site, after
removal or relocation of the existing structure, was a major plank in BJP's campaign during
elections held in 1989 and 1991. Other major political parties, however, had generally opposed this
demand and had taken the stand that while a temple should be built, the issues in dispute should be
resolved either by negotiations or by orders of the Court.

2.3 During the negotiations aimed at finding an amicable solution to the dispute, one issue which
came to the fore was whether a Hindu temple had existed on the site occupied by the disputed
structure and whether it was demolished on Babar's orders for the construction of the Masjid. It was
stated on behalf of the Muslim organisations, as well as by certain eminent historians, that there was
no evidence in favour of either of these two assertions. It was also stated by certain Muslim leaders
that if these assertions were proved, the Muslims would voluntarily handover the disputed shrine to
the Hindus. Naturally, this became the central issue in the negotiations between the VHP and
AIBMAC.

XXX XXX XXX 2.12 The historical debate has thus remained inconclusive although much progress
has been made in identifying the areas of agreement and difference. Conclusive findings can be
obtained only by way of reference to a competent authority. However, as brought out elsewhere in
this Paper the negotiations were disrupted at a crucial phase. Now, the entire evidence has
disappeared along with the disputed structure. It is tragic and ironical that the Ram-chabutra and
Kaushalya Rasoi, which continued as places of worship during periods of Muslim and British rule
have disappeared along with the RJB-BM structure at the hands of people professing to be 'devotees'
of Lord Ram.

PLACING OF IDOLS IN THE DISPUTED STRUCTURE 2.13 As has been mentioned above, Hindu
structures of worship already existed in the outer courtyard of the RJB-BM structure. On the night
of 22nd/23rd December, 1949, however, Hindu idols were placed under the central dome of the
main structure. Worship of these idols was started on a big scale from the next morning. As this was
likely to disturb the public peace, the civil administration attached the premises under Section 145

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 4


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

of the CrPC. This was the starting point of a whole chain of events which ultimately led to the
demolition of the structure. The main events of this chain have been summarised in Apppendix-I.

2.14 Soon after the installation of the idols two civil suits were filed by Hindu plaintiffs seeking to
restrain the Administration from removing the idols from the disputed structure or placing any
restrictions in the way of devotees intending to offer worship. Interim injunctions were issued by the
civil court to this effect. These injunctions were confirmed by the Allahabad High Court in 1955.

2.15 The Hindu Idols thus continued inside the disputed structure since 1949. Worship of these idols
by Hindus also continued without interruption since 1949 and the structure was not used by the
Muslim's for offering prayers since then. The controversy remained at a low ebb till 1986 when the
District Court of Faizabad ordered opening of the lock placed on a grill leading to the
sanctum-sanctorum of the shrine. An organisation called the Babri Masjid Action Committee
(BMAC), seeking restoration of the disputed shrine to the Muslims came into being and launched a
protest movement. The Hindu organisations, on the other hand, stepped up their activities to
mobilise public opinion for the construction of a Ram temple at the disputed site.

13. After the imposition of President's rule in the State of Uttar Pradesh as a consequence of the
events at Ayodhya on 6th December, 1992, action taken by the Central Government is detailed in
Chapter VIII of the White Paper with reference to the communal situation in the country which
deteriorated sharply following the demolition of the RJB-BM structure on 6th December, 1992 and
spread of communal violence in several other States. Para 9.11 in Chapter VIII relating to the
"ACTION TAKEN BY THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT" is as under :-

8.11 Mention has been made above (Overview) of the decisions taken on 7th December by the
Government to ban communal organisations, to take strong action for prosecution of the offences
connected with the demolition, to fix responsibilities of various authorities for their lapses relating
to the events of December 6, to rebuild the demolished structure and to take appropriate steps
regarding new Ram Temple. The last two decisions were further elaborated on 27th December as
follows:

The Government has decided to acquire all areas in dispute in the suits pending in the Allahabad
High Court. It has also been decided to acquire suitable adjacent area. The acquired area excluding
the area on which the disputed structure stood would be made available to two Trusts which would
be set up for construction of a Ram Temple and a Mosque respectively and for planned development
of the area.

The Government of India has also decided to request the President to seek the opinion of the
Supreme Court on the question whether there was a Hindu temple existing on the site where the
disputed structure stood. The Government has also decided to abide by the opinion of the Supreme
Court and to take appropriate steps to enforce the Court's opinion. Notwithstanding the acquisition
of the disputed area, the Government would ensure that the position existing prior to the
promulgation of the Ordinance is maintained until such time as the Supreme Court gives its opinion
in the matter. Thereafter the rights of the parties shall be determined in the light of the Court's

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 5


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

opinion.

In pursuance of these decisions an Ordinance named 'Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya


Ordinance' was issued on 7th January, 1993 for acquisition of 67.703 acres of land in the Ram
Janma Bhoomi-Babri Masjid complex. A reference to the Supreme Court under Article 143 of the
Constitution was also made on the same day. Copy of the Ordinance is at Appendix-XV and of the
Reference at Appendix-XVI.

14. The Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Ordinance, 1993 (No. 8 of 1993) has been "replaced
by the Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act, 1993 (No. 33 of 1993), the constitutional validity
of which has to be examined by us.

15. The said Ordinance, later replaced by Act No. 33 of 1993, and the Special Reference under Article
143(1) of the Constitution of India were made simultaneously the same day on 7th January, 1993. It
would be appropriate at this stage to quote, in extenso, the Statement of Objects and Reasons for
this enactment, the said Act No. 33 of 1993, and the Special Reference under Article 143(1) of the
Constitution:

STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND REASONS There has been a long-standing dispute relating to the
erstwhile Ram-Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid structure in Ayodhya which led to communal tension
and violence from time to time and ultimately led to the destruction of the disputed structure on 6th
December, 1992. This was followed by wide-spread communal violence which resulted in large
number of deaths, injuries and destruction of property in various parts of the country. The said
dispute has thus affected the maintenance of public order and harmony between different
communities in the country. As it is necessary to maintain communal harmony and the spirit of
common brotherhood amongst the people of India, it was considered necessary to acquire the site of
the disputed structure and suitable adjacent land for setting up a complex which could be developed
in a planned manner wherein a Ram temple, a mosque, amenities for pilgrims, a library, museum
and other suitable facilities can be set up.

2. The Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Ordinance, 1993 was accordingly promulgated by the
President on 7th January, 1993. By virtue of the said Ordinance the right, title and interest in
respect of certain areas at Ayodhya specified in the Schedule to the Ordinance stand transferred to,
and vest in, the Central Government.

3. The Bill seeks to replace the aforesaid Ordinance.

S. B. CHAVAN.

NEW DELHI, The 9th March, 1993.

SPECIAL REFERENCE WHEREAS a dispute has arisen whether a Hindu temple or any Hindu
religious structure existed prior to the construction of the structure (including the premises of the
inner and outer courtyards of such structure), commonly known as the Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 6


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

Masjid, in the area in which the structure stood in village Kot Ramachandra in Ayodhya, in Pargana
Haveli Avadh, in Tehsil Faizabad Sadar, in the district of Faizabad of the State of Uttar Pradesh;

2. AND WHEREAS the said area is located in Revenue Plot Nos. 159 and 160 in the said village Kot
Ramchandra;

3. AND WHEREAS the said dispute has affected the maintenance of public order and harmony
between different communities in the country;

4. AND WHEREAS the aforesaid area vests in the Central Government by virtue of the Acquisition
of Certain Area at Ayodhya Ordinance, 1993;

5. AND WHEREAS notwithstanding the vesting of the aforesaid area in the Central Government
under the said Ordinance the Central Government proposes to settle the said dispute after obtaining
the opinion of the Supreme Court of India and in terms of the said opinion;

6. AND WHEREAS in view of what has been herein before stated it appears to me that the question
hereinafter set out has arisen and is of such a nature and of such public importance that it is
expedient to obtain the opinion of the Supreme Court of India thereon;

7. NOW, THEREFORE, in exercise of the powers conferred upon me by Clause (1) of Article 143 of
the Constitution of India, I, Shanker Dayal Sharma, President, of India, hereby refer the following
question to the Supreme Court of India for consideration and opinion thereon, namely:

Whether a Hindu temple or any Hindu religious structure existed prior to the construction of the
Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid (including the premises of the inner and outer courtyards of such
structure) in the area on which the structure stood?

Sd/-

President of India New Delhi:

Dated 7th January, 1993.

THE ACQUISITION OF CERTAIN AREA AT AYODHYA ACT, 1993 (NO. 33 OF 1993) (3rd April,
1993) An Act to provide for the acquisition of certain area at Ayodhya and for matters, connected
therewith or incidental thereto.

WHEREAS there has been a long-standing dispute relating to the structure (including the premises
of the inner and outer courtyards of such structure), commonly known as the Ram Janma
Bhumi-Babri Masjid, situated in village Kot Ramachandra in Ayodhya, in Pargana Haveli Avadh, in
Tehsil Faizabad Sadar, in the district of Faizabad of the State of Uttar Pradesh;

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 7


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

AND WHEREAS the said dispute has affected the maintenance of public order and harmony
between different communities in the country;

AND WHEREAS it is necessary to maintain public order and to promote communal harmony and
the spirit of common brotherhood amongst the people of India;

AND WHEREAS with a view to achieving the aforesaid objectives, it is necessary to acquire certain,
areas in Ayodhya;

BE it enacted by Parliament in the Forty-fourth Year of the Republic of India as follows:-

CHAPTER I PRELIMINARY

1. Short title and commencement.-(1) This Act may be called the Acquisition of Certain Area at
Ayodhya Act, 1993.

(2) It shall be deemed to have come into force on the 7th day of January, 1993.

2. Definitions.- In this Act unless the context otherwise requires,-

(a) "area" means the area (including all the buildings, structures or other properties comprised
therein) specified in the Schedule;

(b) "authorised person" means a person or body of persons or trustees of any trust authorised by the
Central Government under Section 7;

(c) "Claims Commissioner" means the Claims Commissioner appointed under Sub-section (2) of
Section 8;

(d) "prescribed" means prescribed by rules made under this Act.

CHAPTER II ACQUISITION OF THE AREA IN AYODHYA

3. Acquisition of rights in respect of certain area.- On and from the commencement of this Act, the
right, title and interest in relation to the area shall, by virtue of this Act, stand transferred to, and
vest in, the Central Government.

4. General effect of vesting.- (1) The area shall be deemed to include all assets, rights, leaseholds,
powers, authority and privileges and all property, movable and immovable, including lands,
buildings, structures, shops of whatever nature or other properties and all other rights and interests
in, or arising out of, such properties as were immediately before the commencement of this Act in
the ownership, possession, power or control of any person or the State Government of Uttar
Pradesh, as the case may be, and all registers, maps, plans, drawings and other documents of
whatever nature relating thereto.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 8


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

(2) All properties aforesaid which have vested in the Central Government under Section 3 shall, by
force of such vesting, be freed and discharged from any trust, obligation, mortgage, charge, lien and
all other encumbrances affecting them and any attachment, injunction decree or order of any court
or tribunal or other authority restricting the use of such properties in any manner or appointing any
receiver in respect of the whole or any part of such properties shall cease to have any effect.

(3) If, on the commencement of this Act, any suit, appeal or other proceeding in respect of the right,
title and interest relating to any property which has vested in the Central Government under Section
3, is pending before any court, tribunal or other authority, the same shall abate.

5. Duty of person or State Government in charge of the management of the area to deliver all assets,
etc.-(1) The Central Government may take all necessary steps to secure possession of the area which
is vested in that Government under Section 3, (2) On the vesting of the area in the Central
Government under Section 3, the person or State Government of Uttar Pradesh, as the case may be,
in charge of the management of the area immediately before such vesting shall be bound to deliver
to the Central Government or the authorised person, all assets, registers and other documents in
their custody relating to such vesting or where it is not practicable to deliver such registers or
documents, the copies of such registers or documents authenticated in the prescribed manner.

6. Power of Central Government to direct vesting of the area in another authority or body or trust.-
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in Sections 3, 4, 5 and 7, the Central Government may, if it
is satisfied that any authority or other body, or trustees of any trust, set up on or after the
commencement of this Act is or are willing to comply with such terms and conditions as that
Government may think fit to impose, direct by notification in the Official Gazette, that the right, title
and interest or any of them in relation to the area or any part thereof, instead of continuing to vest
in the Central Government, vest in that authority or body or trustees of that trust either on the date
of the notification or on such later date as may be specified in the notification.

(2) When any right, title and interest in relation to the area or part thereof vest in the authority or
body or trustees referred to in Sub-section (1), such rights of the Central Government in relation to
such area or part thereof, shall, on and from the date of such vesting, be deemed to have become the
rights of that authority or body or trustees of that trust.

(3) The provisions of Sections 4, 5, 7 and 11 shall, so far as may be, apply in relation to such
authority or body or trustees as they apply in relation to the Central Government and for this
purpose references therein to the "Central Government" shall be construed as references to such
authority or body or trustees.

CHAPTER III MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION OF PROPERTY

7. Management of property by Government.- (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in any


contract or instrument or order of any court, tribunal or other authority to the contrary, on and from
the commencement of this Act, the property vested in the Central Government under Section 3 shall
be managed by the Central Government or by a person or body of persons of trustees of any trust

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 9


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

authorised by that Government in this behalf.

(2) In managing the property vested in the Central Government under Section 3, the Central
Government or the authorised person shall ensure that the position existing before the
commencement of this Act in the area on which the structure (including the premises of the inner
and outer courtyards of such structure), commonly known as the Ram Janma Bhumi - Babri Masjid,
stood in village Kot Ramachandra in Ayodhya, in Pargana Haveli Avadh, in Tehsil Faizabad Sadar,
in the district of Faizabad of the State of Uttar Pradesh is maintained.

CHAPTER IV MISCELLANEOUS

8. Payment of amount.- (1) The owner of any land, building, structure or other property comprised
in the area shall be given by the Central Government, for the transfer to and vesting in that
Government under Section 3 of that land, building, structure or other property, in cash an amount
equivalent to the market value of the land, building, structure or other property.

(2) The Central Government shall, for the purpose of deciding the claim of the owner or any person
having a claim against the owner under Sub-section (1), by notification in the Official Gazette,
appoint a Claims Commissioner.

(3) The Claims Commissioner shall regulate his own procedure for receiving and deciding the
claims.

(4) The owner or any person having a claim against the owner may make a claim to the Claims
Commissioner within a period of ninety days from the date of commencement of this Act;

Provided that if the Claims Commissioner is satisfied that the claimant was prevented by sufficient
cause from preferring the claim within the said period of ninety days, the Claims Commissioner may
entertain the claim within a further period of ninety days and not thereafter.

9. Act to override all other enactments.- The provisions of this Act shall have effect notwithstanding
anything inconsistent therewith contained in any other law for the time being in force or any
instrument having effect by virtue of any law other than this Act or any decree or order of any court,
tribunal or other authority.

10. Penalties.- Any person who is in charge of the management of the area and fails to deliver to the
Central Government or the authorised person any asset, register or other document in his custody
relating to such area or, as the case may be, authenticated copies of such register or document, shall
be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years or with fine which
may extend to ten thousand rupees, or with both.

11. Protection of action taken in good faith.- No suit, prosecution or other legal proceeding shall lie
against the Central Government or the authorised person or any of the officers or other employees of
that Government or the authorised person for anything which is in good faith done or intended to be

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 10


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

done under this Act.

12. Power to make rules.- (1) The Central Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette,
make rules to carry out the provisions of this Act.

(2) Every rule made by the Central Government under this Act shall be laid, as soon as may be after
it is made, before each House of Parliament, while it is in session, for a total period of thirty days
which may be comprised in one session or in two or more successive sessions, and if, before the
expiry of the sessions immediately following the session or the successive sessions aforesaid, both
Houses agree in making any modification in the rule or both Houses agree that the rule should not
be made, the rule shall thereafter have effect only in such modified form or be of no effect, as the
case may be; so, however, that any such modification or annulment shall be without prejudice to the
validity of anything previously done under that rule.

13. Repeal and saving.- (1) Subject to the provisions of Sub-section (2), the Acquisition of Certain
Area at Ayodhya Ordinance, 1993, is hereby repealed.

(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in the said Ordinance,-

(a) the right, title and interest in relation to plot No. 242 situated in village Kot Ramachandra
specified against Sl. No. 1 of the Schedule to the said Ordinance shall be deemed never to have been
transferred to, and vested in, the Central Government;

(b) any suit, appeal or other proceeding in respect of the right, title and interest relating to the said
plot No. 242, pending before any court, tribunal or other authority, shall be deemed never to have
abated and such suit, appeal or other proceeding (including the orders or interim orders of any court
thereon) shall be deemed to have been restored to the position existing immediately before the
commencement of the said Ordinance;

(c) any other action taken or thing done under that Ordinance in relation to the said plot No. 242
shall be deemed never to have been taken or done.

(3) Notwithstanding such repeal, anything done or any action taken under the said Ordinance shall
be deemed to have been done or taken under the corresponding provisions of this Act.

THE SCHEDULE (See Section 2(a)) DESCRIPTION OF THE AREA XXX XXX XXX

16. At the hearing, it was strenuously urged that the question of fact referred under Article 143(1) of
the Constitution is vague; the answer to it is by itself not decisive of the real controversy since the
core question has not been referred; and it also gives no definite indication of the manner in which
the Central Government intends to act after the Special Reference is answered, to settle the dispute.
It was urged that the question referred is, therefore, academic, apart from being vague, and it does
not serve any constitutional purpose to subserve which the advisory jurisdiction of this Court could
be invoked; that the real object and purpose of reference is to take away a place of worship of the

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 11


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

Muslims and give it away to the Hindus offending the basic feature of secularism; and that,
therefore, we should decline to answer the Special Reference. The learned Solicitor General who
appeared for the Union of India was asked to clarify the stand of the Central Government on this
point. Initially, it was stated by the learned Solicitor General that the answer to the question would
provide the basis for further negotiations between the different groups to settle the controversy and
the Central Government would then be able to decide the effective course available to it for resolving
the controversy. On being asked to further clarify the stand of the Central Government about the
purpose of the Special Reference, the learned Solicitor General made a statement in writing on
behalf of the Union of India on 14th September, 1994 as under:-

Government stands by the policy of secularism and of even-handed treatment of all religious
communities. The Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act, 1993, as well as the Presidential
Reference, have the objective of maintaining public order and promoting communal harmony and
the spirit of common brotherhood amongst the people of India.

Government is committed to the construction of a Ram temple and a mosque, but their actual
location will be determined only after the Supreme Court renders its opinion in the Presidential
Reference.

Government will treat the finding of the Supreme Court on the question of fact referred under
Article 143 of the Constitution as a verdict which is final and binding.

In the light of the Supreme Court's opinion and consistent with it, Government will make efforts to
resolve the controversy by a process of negotiations. Government is confident that the opinion of the
Supreme Court will have a salutary effect on the attitude of the communities and they will no longer
take conflicting positions on the factual issue settled by the Supreme Court.

If efforts at, a negotiated settlement as aforesaid do not succeed, Government is committed to


enforce a solution in the light of the Supreme Court's opinion and consistent with it. Government's
action in this regard will be even-handed in respect of both the communities. If the question
referred is answered in the affirmative, namely, that a Hindu temple/structure did exist prior to the
construction of the demolished structure, Government action will be in support of the wishes of the
Hindu community. If, on the other hand, the question is answered in the negative, namely, that no
such Hindu temple/ structure existed at the relevant time, then Government action will be in
support of the wishes of the Muslim community.

This statement in writing made by the learned Solicitor General on behalf of the Union of India
forms a part of the record and has to be taken into account to indicate the purpose for which the
Special Reference under Article 143(1) has been made to this Court.

17. The dispute and its background are mentioned in paras 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3 of Chapter II of the
White Paper quoted earlier. This is the backdrop in which the constitutional validity of Act No. 33 of
1993 and the maintainability of the Special Reference made under Article 143(1) of the Constitution
of India have to be examined.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 12


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

VALIDITY OF ACT NO. 33 OF 1993

18. Broadly stated, the focus of challenge to the statute as a whole is on the grounds of secularism,
right to equality and right to freedom of religion. Challenge to the acquisition of the area in excess of
the disputed area is in addition on the ground that the acquisition was unnecessary being unrelated
to the dispute pertaining to the small disputed area within it. A larger argument advanced on behalf
of some of the parties who have assailed the act with considerable vehemence is that a mosque being
a place of religious worship by the Muslims, independently of whether the acquisition did affect the
right to practise religion, is wholly immune from the State's power of acquisition and the statute is,
therefore, unconstitutional as violative of Articles 25 and 26 of the Constitution of India for this
reason alone. The others, however, limited this argument of immunity from acquisition only to
places of special significance, forming an essential and integral part of the right to practise the
religion, the acquisition of which would result in the estimation of the right to freedom of religion
itself. It was also contended that the purpose of acquisition in the present case does not bring the
statute within the ambit of Entry 42, List III but is referable to Entry 1, List II and, therefore, the
Parliament did not have the competence to enact the same. It was then urged by learned Counsel
canvassing the Muslim interest that the legislation is tilted heavily in favour of the Hindu interests
and, therefore, suffers from the vice of non-secularism and discrimination in addition to violation of
the right to freedom of religion of the Muslim community. It was also urged by them that the Central
Government, after the Prime Minister's statement made on 7th December, 1992, to rebuild the
demolished structure (para 1.22 in Chapter I of the White Paper) resiled from the same and by
incorporating certain provisions in the statute has sought to perpetuate the injustice done to the
Muslim community by the act of vandalism of demolition of the structure at Ayodhya on 6th
December, 1992. On behalf of the Muslim community, it is urged that the statute read in the context
of the content of the question referred under Article 143(1) of the Constitution, as it must be, is a
mere veiled concealment of a device adopted by the Central Government to perpetuate the
consequences of the demolition of the mosque on 6th December, 1992. The grievance of the Hindu
opponents is that the mischief and acts of vandalism committed by a few are being attributed to the
entire Hindu community the majority of whom is equally hurt by, and critical of, the shameful act.
They urge that this disapproval by the majority community is evident from the result of the
subsequent elections in which the Bhartiya Janata Party was rejected at the hustings by the Hindu
majority. They also submit that the fact of demolition of Hindu structures like the Ramchabutra and
Kaushalya Rasoi which stood since ages in the disputed site resulting in interruption of even the
undisputed right of worship of Hindus within that area is being ignored. It is also contended that
there is no justification for acquisition of any property in excess of the disputed area and, therefore,
the acquisition at least of the excess area belonging, admittedly, to Hindus is invalid.

On behalf of the Central Government, it is urged that in the existing situation and in view of the
widespread communal flare-up throughout the country on account of the events at Ayodhya on 6th
December, 1992, the most appropriate course, in the opinion of the Central Government, was to
make this acquisition along with the Special Reference to decide the question which would facilitate
a negotiated solution of the problem, and if it failed, to enable the Central Government to take any
other appropriate action to resolve the controversy and restore communal harmony in the country.
It was made clear that acquisition of the disputed area was not meant to deprive the community

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 13


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

found entitled to it, of the same, or to retain any part of the excess area which was not necessary for
a proper resolution of the dispute or to effectuate the purpose of the acquisition, it was submitted
that an assurance of communal harmony throughout the country was a prime constitutional
purpose and avoidance of escalation of the dispute in the wake of the incident at Ayodhya on 6th
December, 1992 was an essential step in that direction, which undoubtedly promotes the creed of
secularism instead of impairing it. It was submitted that the charge leveled against the Central
Government of discrimination against any religious community or of anti-secularism is wholly
unwarranted.

19. Another argument advanced on behalf of the Muslim community was that the defences open to
the minority community in the suits filed by the other side including that of adverse possession by
virtue of long possession of the disputed site for over 400 years since its construction in 1528 A. D.
have also been extinguished by the acquisition, giving an unfair advantage to the other side. It was
also urged that the core question in the dispute between the parties was not the Subject-matter of
the Special Reference made under Article 143(1) of the Constitution and, therefore, answer to the
same would not result in a resolution of the dispute between the parties to the suits. It was
accordingly urged, there is deprivation of the judicial remedy for adjudication of the dispute without
the substitution of an alternate dispute resolution mechanism, which is impermissible under the
Constitution.

20. It is appropriate at this stage to refer to the provisions of the statute before we deal with the
arguments challenging its constitutional validity. The Statement of Objects and Reasons says that
there is a long-standing dispute relating to the disputed structure in Ayodhya which led to
communal tension and violence from time to time and ultimately has led to the destruction of the
disputed structure on 6th December, 1992 followed by widespread communal violence resulting in
loss of many lives and destruction of property throughout the country. The said dispute has thus
affected the maintenance of public order and communal harmony in the country. Obviously, it is
necessary to maintain and promote communal harmony and fraternity amongst the people of India.
With this objective in view it was considered necessary to acquire the site of the disputed structure
and the requisite adjacent area to be utilised in an appropriate manner to achieve this object.

For this purpose, the Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Ordinance, 1993 was promulgated by
the President on 7th January, 1993 and, simultaneously, on the same day, this Reference was also
made by the President to this Court under Article 143(1) of the Constitution. The said Ordinance was
replaced by the Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act, 1993 (No. 33 of 1993) to the same effect,
and Section 1(2) provides that the Act shall be deemed to have come into force on the 7th January,
1993. The provisions of the said Act are now considered.

21. Section 3 provides for acquisition of rights in relation to the "area" defined in Section 2(a). It
says that on and from the commencement of this Act the right, title and interest in relation to the
area shall, by virtue of this Act, stand transferred to, and vest in, the Central Government. It is
well-settled that the meaning of "vest" takes colour from the context in which it is used and it is not
necessarily the, same in every provision or in every context. In Maharaj Singh v. State of Uttar
Pradesh , it was held :

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 14


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

...Is such a construction of 'vesting' in two different senses in the same section, sound? Yes. It is,
because 'vesting' is a word of slippery import and has many meanings. The context controls the text
and the purpose and scheme project the particular semantic shade or nuance of meaning. That is
why even definition clauses allow themselves to be modified by contextual compulsions....

The meaning of "vest" in Section 3 and in Section 6 is of significance in the context of the
constitutional validity of the statute. It can vary in different parts of the statute or even the same
Section, depending on the context of its use.

22. Section 4 then provides the general effect of vesting. Obviously, the effect of vesting will depend
on the meaning of the word "vest" used in Section 3 and the kind of vesting in the present context.
Sub-section (1) of Section 4 provides that the area shall be deemed to include all assets, rights, etc.
specified therein of whatever nature relating thereto. Sub-section (2) further says that all properties
aforesaid which have vested in the Central Government under Section 3 shall, by force of such
vesting, be freed and discharged from all encumbrances affecting them and any attachment,
injunction, decree or order of any Court or tribunal or other authority restricting the use of such
properties in any manner or appointing any receiver in respect of the whole or any part of the
property shall cease to have effect. In other words, the effect of such vesting is to free all properties
aforesaid which have vested in the Central Government under Section 3 of all encumbrances and the
consequence of any order of any Court or tribunal of any kind restricting their user in any manner.
Sub-section (3) of Section 4 provides for abatement of all pending suits and legal proceedings. The
meaning of the word "vest" in Section 3 has a bearing on the validity of this provision since the
consequence of abatement of suits etc. provided therein is relatable only to absolute vesting of the
disputed area which is the subject-matter of the suits and not to a situation where the vesting under
Section 3 is of a limited nature for a particular purpose, and is of limited duration till the happening
of a future event. Section 5 indicates the duty of the person or State Government in charge of the
management of the area to deliver all assets etc. to the Central Government on such vesting.
Sub-section (1) empowers the Central Government to take all necessary steps to secure possession of
the area which is vested in the Central Government under Section 3. Sub-section (2) obliges the
person or State Government of Uttar Pradesh, as the case may be, in charge of the management of
the area immediately before such vesting to deliver to the Central Government or the authorised
person all assets etc. in their custody relating to such vesting. In short, Section 5 provides the
consequential action to be taken by the Central Government with the corresponding obligation of
the person or State Government in charge of the management of the area to deliver possession of the
area, together with its management, to the Central Government, on such vesting.

23. Then comes Section 6 which is the last Section in Chapter II, to which detailed reference would
be made later. At this stage a general reference to its contents is sufficient. Section 6 contains the
power of Central Government to direct vesting of the area in another authority or body or. trust.
Sub-section (1) provides that the Central Government may, notwithstanding anything contained in
Sections 3, 4, 5 and 7, direct by notification in the Official Gazette, that the right, title and interest or
any of them in relation to the area or any part thereof, instead of continuing to vest in the Central
Government, vest in that authority or body or trustees of that trust from the specified date, if it is
satisfied that the same is willing to comply with such terms and conditions as the Central

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 15


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

Government may think fit to impose. In short, Sub-section (1) empowers the Central Government to
transfer its right, title and interest or any of them in the area or any part thereof to any authority or
other body or trustees of any trust on such terms and conditions as it may think fit to impose,
instead of continuing to retain the same itself. Sub-section (2) provides for the consequences of the
action taken under Sub-section (1) giving recognition to the statutory transfer effected by the
Central Government to effectuate the purpose of such transfer by the Central Government by
declaring that the transferee would then step into the shoes of the Central Government acquiring the
same right, title and interest in the area or part thereof which by virtue of the enactment had earlier
vested in the Central Government. Sub-section (2) is another consequence of the action taken under
Sub-section (1) and provides that Sections 4, 5, 7 and 11, so far as may be, would apply to such
transferee as they apply in relation to the Central Government. It may here be recalled that Section 4
relates to the effect of vesting under Section 3; Section 5 to the duty of the person or State in charge
of the management of the area to deliver possession etc. to the Central Government or the
authorised person; Section 7 to the management and the administration of property by the Central
Government on its vesting; and Section 11 gives protection to action taken in good faith by the
Central Government or the authorised person or any one acting on its behalf under this Act.

24. Chapter III contains Section 7 alone which would be considered at length later in view of the
serious challenge made to its constitutional validity. This Section deals with the management and
administration of the property by the Central Government, on its vesting. Sub-section (1) provides
for management of the property vested in the Central Government under Section 3 by the Central
Government or by any authorised person, on such vesting, notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in any contract or instrument or order of any Court, tribunal or other authority. In other
words, in spite of any contrary provision in any contract or instrument or order of any Court,
tribunal or other authority, from the commencement of this act, the management of the property
vested in the Central Government under Section 3 shall be by the Central Government or by an
authorised person, so authorised by the Government in its behalf and none else. This provision
expressly supersedes any earlier provision relating to the management of the property so vested in
the Central Government, Sub-section (2) then provides for the manner of the management of the
property by the Central Government or the authorised person. It mandates the Central Government
or the authorised person, in managing the property vested in the Central Government under Section
3, to ensure that the position existing before the commencement of this Act "in the area on which
the structure (including the premises of the inner and outer courtyards of such structure),
commonly known as the Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid, stood" is maintained. This means that
the power of management of the Central Government or the authorised person under Sub-section
(1) of Section 7 is coupled with the duty contained in the mandate given by Sub-section (2). The
mandate is that in managing the property so vested in the Central Government, the Central
Government or the authorised person shall ensure maintenance of the status quo "in the area on
which the structure (including the premises of the inner and outer courtyards of such structure),
commonly known as the Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid, stood". There was some debate as to the
meaning of the word "area" in this context. One construction suggested was that the word "area"
used in this expression has the same meaning as in the definition contained in Section 2(a), that is,
the entire area specified in the Schedule to the Act. Section 2 itself says that the definitions therein
give the meaning of the words defined "unless the context otherwise requires". The context in which

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 16


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

the word "area" is used in the expression in Section 7(2) gives the clear indication that its meaning is
not the same as in Section 2(a) to mean the entire area specified in the Schedule since the words
which follow qualify its meaning confining it only to the site on which this structure, commonly
known as the Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid stood, which site or area is undoubtedly smaller and
within "the area specified in the Schedule".

25. Chapter IV contains the miscellaneous provisions. Therein Section 8 provides for payment of
amount equivalent to the market value of the land, building, structure or other property by the
Central Government for the transfer to, and vesting of the property in, the Government under
Section 3, to its owner. Remaining part of Section 8 contains the machinery provisions for payment
of the amount. Section 9 gives the overriding effect of the provisions of this Act on any other law or
decree or order of any Court, tribunal or other authority. Section 10 provides for penalties. It says
that any person who is in charge of the management of the area and fails to deliver to the Central
Government or the authorised person the possession etc. required under this Act shall be
punishable in the manner provided. Section 11 gives protection to the Central Government or the
authorised person or any one acting on its behalf for anything done or intended to be done under
this act in good faith. Section 12 contains the rule-making power of the Central Government to carry
out the provisions of this Act and the manner in which the rules are to be made. Section 13 is the last
section of the Act providing for repeal of the earlier Ordinance and savings.

26. The foregoing is a brief resume of the provisions of Act No. 33 of 1993, the constitutional validity
of which has to be examined in the light of the grounds of challenge. The meaning of the word "vest"
in Section 2 and the kind of vesting contemplated thereby, the effect of vesting including abatement
of all pending suits and legal proceedings, according to Section 4, the power of Central Government
to direct vesting of the area or any part thereof in another authority or body or trust and its effect
according to Section 6, and Section 7 providing for management of property by the Central
Government or the authorised person are the provisions of particular significance for deciding the
question of constitutionality. Section 8 also is of some significance in this context.

27. We may now proceed to consider the merits of the grounds on which the Act is assailed as
constitutionally invalid.

LEGISLATIVE COMPETENCE

28. The legislative competence is traceable to Entry 42, List III and the State of Uttar Pradesh being
under President's rule at the relevant time, the legislative competence of the Parliament, in the
circumstances, cannot be doubted. That apart, the pith and substance of the legislation is
"acquisition of property" and that falls squarely within the ambit of Entry 42, List III. Competing
entry set up is Entry 1, List II relating to "public order". "Acquisition of property" and not "public
order" is the pith and substance of the statute.

29. In State of Bihar v. Maharajadhiraja Sir Kameshwar Singh of Darbhanga , it was pointed out that
where the dominant purpose of the act was that of transference to the State of the interests of the
proprietors and tenure holders of the land, the pith and substance of the legislation was the

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 17


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

transference of ownership to the State Government and it was an "acquisition" Act. In Dy. Commr.
and Collector, Kamrup v. Durga Nath Sarma , Bachawat, J. pointed out that a law for permanent
acquisition of property is not a law for promotion of public health etc. since only the taking of
temporary possession of private properties can be regarded as a law for promotion of public health.

30. It is significant to bear in mind that Entry 42, List III, as it now exists, was substituted by the
Constitution ' (Seventh Amendment) Act to read as under:-

Acquisition and requisitioning of property.

Before the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, the relevant entries read as follows:-

List I, Entry 33 :

Acquisition or requisitioning of property for the purposes of the Union.

List II, Entry 36 :

Acquisition or requisitioning of property, except for the purposes of the Union, subject to the
provisions of Entry 42 of List III.

List III, Entry 42 :

Principles on which compensation for property acquired is requisitioned for the purposes of the
Union or of a State or for any other public purpose, is to be determined, and the form and the
manner in which such compensation is to be given.

By the amendment so made, Entry 42, List III reads as extracted earlier while Entry 33, List I and
Entry 36, List II have been omitted. The comprehensive Entry 42 in List III as a result of the
Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act leaves no doubt that an acquisition Act of this kind falls
clearly within the ambit of this Entry and, therefore, the legislative competence of the Parliament to
enact this legislation cannot be doubted. This ground of challenge is, therefore, rejected.

SECULARISM, RIGHT TO FREEDOM OF RELIGION AND RIGHT TO EQUALITY

31. It would be appropriate now to consider the attack based on secularism which is a basic feature
of the Constitution, with the two attendant rights. The argument is that the Act read as a whole is
anti-secular being slanted in favour of the Hindu community and against the Muslim minority since
it seeks to perpetuate demolition of the mosque which stood on the disputed site instead of
providing for the logical just action of rebuilding it, appropriate in the circumstances. It is urged that
Section 4(3) provides for abatement of all pending suits and legal proceedings depriving the Muslim
community of its defences including that of adverse possession for over 400 years since 1528 AD
when the mosque was constructed on that site by Mir Baqi, without providing for an alternate
dispute resolution mechanism, and thereby it deprives the Muslim community of the judicial

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 18


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

remedy to which it is entitled in the constitutional scheme under the rule of law. It is urged that the
Special Reference under Article 143(1) of the Constitution to this Court by the President of India is
not of the core question, the answer to which would automatically resolve the dispute but only of a
vague and hypothetical issue, the answer to which would not help in the resolution of the dispute as
a legal issue. It is also urged that Section 6 enables transfer of the acquired property including the
disputed area to any authority, body or trust by the Central Government without reference to the
real title over the disputed site. It is further contended that Section 7 perpetuates the mischief of the
demolition of the mosque by directing maintenance of the status quo as on 7th January, 1993 which
enables the Hindus to exercise the right of worship of some kind in the disputed site keeping the
Muslims totally excluded from that area and this discrimination can be perpetuated to any length of
time by the Central Government. The provision in Section 7, it is urged, has the potential of
perpetuating this mischief. Reference was also made to Section 8 to suggest that it is meaningless
since the question of ownership over the disputed site remains to be decided and with the abatement
of all pending suits and legal proceedings, there is no mechanism by which it can be adjudicated.
The objection to Section 8 is obviously in the context of the disputed area over which the title is in
dispute and not to the remaining area specified in the Schedule to the Act, the ownership of which is
not disputed. The validity of acquisition is also challenged by others including those who own some
of the acquired properties and in whose case the title is not disputed. Their contention is that
acquisition of their property, title to which is undisputed, is unnecessary. Parties to the pending
suits which have abated, other than the Sunni Central Wakf Board, have also challenged the validity
of the Act, even though on other grounds, violation of Articles 14, 25 and 26 also is alleged on these
grounds. This "discussion, therefore, covers these grounds.

32. For a proper consideration of the challenge based on the ground of secularism, it is appropriate
to refer to the concept of secularism and the duty of the Courts in construing a statute in this
context.

33. The polity assured to the people of India by the Constitution is described in the Preamble
wherein the word "secular" was added by the 42nd Amendment. It highlights the fundamental
rights guaranteed in Articles 25 to 28 that the State shall have no religion of its own and all persons
shall be equally entitled to freedom of conscience and the right freely to profess, practise and
propagate religion of their own choice, in brief, this is the concept of secularism as a basic feature of
the Constitution of India and the way of life adopted by the people of India as their abiding faith and
creed. M.C. Setalvad in Patel Memorial Lectures - 1985, on Secularism, referring to the Indian
concept of secularism, stated thus:

...The coming of the partition emphasised the great importance of secularism, Notwithstanding the
partition, a large Muslim minority, constituting a tenth of the population, continued to be the
citizens of independent India. There were also other important minority groups of citizens. In the '
circumstances, a secular Constitution for independent India, under which all religions ' could enjoy
equal freedom and all citizen's ' equal rights, and which could weld together into one nation the
different religious communities, became inevitable.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 19


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

...The ideal, therefore, of a secular State in the sense of a State which treats all religions alike and
displays a benevolent neutrality towards them is in a way more suited to the Indian environment
and climate than that of a truly secular State.

...Secularism, in the Indian context, must be given the widest possible content. It should connote the
eradication of all attitudes and practices derived from or connected with religion which impede our
development and retard our growth into an integrated nation.. A concerted and earnest endeavour,
both by the State and citizen, towards secularisation in accordance with this wide concept alone lead
to the stabilisation of our democratic state and the establishment of a true and cohesive Indian
nationhood.

34. A reference to the Address of the President of India, Dr. Shanker Dayal Sharma, as the then
Vice-President of India, on "Secularism in the Indian Ethos" while, delivering Dr. Zakir Hussain
Memorial Lecture of Vishva-Bharati, Shantiniketan, on 29th April, 1989 is useful. Therein, he
referred to the difference between our understanding of the word "secular" and that in the West or
its dictionary meaning, and said :-

We in India, however, understand secularism to denote 'Sarva Dharma Samabhaav' an approach of


tolerance and understanding of the equality of all religions.

xxx xxx xxx This philosophical approach of understanding, co-existence and tolerance is the very
spirit of our ancient thought....

xxx xxx xxx The Yajurveda states:

fe=L; ek p{kq"kk lokZf.k Hkwrkfu leh{kUrkeA fe=L;kga p{kq"kk lokZf.k Hkwrkfu leh{ksA fe=L;
p{kq"kk leh{kkegsAA AA;tq% 38-18AA May all beings look on me with the eyes of a friend: May I
look on all beings with the eyes of a friend, May we look on one another with the eyes of a friend.

A very significant manifestation of secular outlook is contained in the Prithvi Sukta in the Atharva
Veda:

tua foHkzfr cgq/kk fookpleA ukuk/kekZ.ka i`fFkZoh ;FkkSdleA This Earth, which accommodates
people of different persuasions and languages, as in a peaceful home - may it benefit all of us.

rk u% iztk% cgqrka lexzka okpks e/kqi`fFkZfo ?ksfg eg;eA Oh, Mother Earth, give to us, as your
children the capacity to interact harmoniously; may we speak sweetly with one another.

And the Rg. Veda emphatically declares :

^^,dSo ekuq"kh tkfr%** All human beings are of one race.

Thus a philosophical and ethnological composite is provided by ancient Indian thought for
developing Sarva Dharma Samabhaav or secular thought and outlook. This enlightenment is the

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 20


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

true nucleus of what is now known as Hinduism.

35. Proceeding further, referring to the impact of other religions on the Indian ethos, he said:

Two aspects in this regard are noteworthy. First, the initial appearance of Christianity or Islam or
Zoroastrianism in India and their establishment on the mainland did not occur as a result of
military conquest or threat of conquest. These religions were given a place by virtue of the attitude
of accommodation and co-existence displayed by local authorities - including the main religious
authorities. The second aspect is even more important: Christianity, Islam and Zoroastrianism
brought with them spiritual and humanistic thought harmonious and, in fact, identical to the core
ideas of the established religious thought in India as exemplified by the basic beliefs of Vedic,
Vedantic, Buddhist and Jain philosophy.

36. The influence of saints and holy persons was indicated thus :

...There was natural interest, therefore, in Islam as a revealed religion brought-forth by a Prophet of
profound charisma who had faced adversities, and in Christianity, which spread the light of Jesus
Christ who had suffered a terrible crucification for humanity's sake. The Quran moreover referred to
great souls such as Abraham, Issac, Ishmael, Jacob, Moses mentioned in the Old Testament of the
Christian faith, and Jasus, A1-Fatiha or Fatiha Tu Alfatha which is also referred to as Ummul Quran
or the essence of the Quran refers to 'Allah' as Rab-ul-Alamin or Lord of the entire universe, it does
not confine him to Muslims alone. The Second Surah in the Quran, titled "Al-Baqurah" gives a
warning, which is repeated throughout the Quran, that it is not mere professing of one's creed, but
righteous conduct, that is true religion. Verses 44, 81 and 82 from this Surah make this absolutely
clear.

37. Dr. Sharma also adverted to the contribution made to growth of secularism by Akbar who
founded "Din-e-illahi" and the support he was given by Abdul Rahim Khane Khana in addition to
the secularism of Dara Shikoh. Impact of Muslim mysticism on Hinduism and contribution of Kabir
to the Indian ethos has been lasting. Secular ideals led to formation of the Sikh faith and the Gurus
have made a lasting contribution to it. He said:

Guru Gobind Singh further magnified the secular ideal of the Sikh faith. The following lines
composed by Guru Govind Singh come to mind.

nsgqjk elhr lksbZ] iwtk vks uekt vksbZ] ekul lSHk ,sd iS vusd dks izHkko gSA vyg vHks; lksbZ] iqjku
vks dqjku vksbZ] , ,sd gh l:i lHkS] ,d gh cuko gSA Mandir or Mosque, Puja or Namaz, Puran or
Quran have no difference. All human beings are equal.

38. After adverting to the significant role of Mahatma Gandhi and Khan Abdul Gaffar Khan in recent
times, Dr. Sharma concluded :

The Constitution of India specifically articulated the commitment of secularism on the basis of clear
understanding of the desirable relationships between the individual and Religion, between Religion

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 21


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

and Religion, Religion and the State, and the State and the Individual....

xxx xxx xxx I shall conclude with a few words, very meaningful words, from a speech by Dr. Zakir
Hussain: "We want peace between the individual and groups within nations. These are all vitally
interdependant. If the spirit of the Sermon on the Mount, Buddha's philosophy of compassion, the
Hindu concept of Ahimsa, and the passion of Islam for obedience to the will of God can combine,
then we would succeed in generating the most potent influence for world peace.

39. In S.R. Bommai v. Union of India , a nine-Judge Bench referred to the concept of "secularism" in
the Indian context. Sawant, J. dealt with this aspect and after referring to the Setalvad Lecture,
stated thus:

As stated above, religious tolerance and equal treatment of all religious groups and protection of
their life and property and of the places of their worship are an essential part of secularism
enshrined in our Constitution. We have accepted the said goal not only because it is our historical
legacy and a need of our national unity and integrity but also as a creed of universal brotherhood
and humanism. It is our cardinal faith. Any profession and action which go counter to the aforesaid
creed are a prima facie proof of the conduct in defiance of the provisions of our Constitution... (at
pages 147-48) (of SCC) : (at p. 3064 of AIR) Similarly, K. Ramaswamy, J. in the same decision
stated:

...Though the concept of "secularism" was not expressly engrafted while making the Constitution, its
sweep, operation and visibility are apparent from fundamental rights and directive principles and
their related provisions. It was made explicit by amending the preamble of the Constitution 42nd
Amendment Act. The concept of secularism of which religious freedom is the foremost appears to
visualise not only of the subject of God but also an understanding between man and man.
Secularism in the Constitution is not anti-God and it is sometimes believed to be a stay in a free
society, Matters which are purely religious are left personal to the individual and the secular part is
taken charge by the State on grounds of public interest, order and general welfare. The State
guarantee individual and corporate religious freedom and dealt with an individual as citizen
irrespective of his faith and religious belief and does not promote any particular religion nor prefers
one against another. The concept of the secular State is, therefore, essential for successful working
of the democratic form of Government. There can be no democracy if anti-secular forces are allowed
to work dividing followers of different religious faith flying at each other's throats. The secular
Government should negate the attempt and bring order in the society. Religion in the positive sense,
is an active instrument to allow the citizen full development of his person, not merely in the physical
and material but in the non-material and non-secular life." (at page 163) (of SCC) : (at p. 3080 of
AIR).

"...it would thus be clear that Constitution made demarcation between religious part personal to the
individual and secular part thereof. The State does not extend patronage to any particular religion,
State is neither pro particular religion nor anti particular religion, it stands aloof, in other words
maintains neutrality in matters of religion and provides equal protection to all religions subject to
regulation and actively acts on secular part." (at page 168) (of SCC) : (at p. 3085 of AIR).

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 22


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

B. P. Jeevan Reddy, J. in the same context in the decision stated thus:

...While the citizens of this country are free to profess, practice and propagate such religion, faith or
belief as they choose, so far as the State is concerned, i.e., from the point of view of the State, the
religion, faith or belief of a person is immaterial. To it, all are equal and all are entitled to be treated
equally.

How is this equal treatment possible, if the State were to prefer or promote a particular religion, race
or caste, which necessarily means a less favourable treatment of all other religions, races and castes.
How are the constitutional promises of social justice, liberty of belief, faith or worship and equality
of status and of opportunity to be attained unless the State eschews the religion, faith or belief of a
person from its consideration altogether while dealing with him, his rights, his duties and his
entitlements'? Secularism is thus more than a passive attitude of religious tolerance. It is a positive
concept of equal treatment of all religions. This attitude is described by some as one of neutrality
towards religion or as one of benevolent neutrality. This may be a concept evolved by western liberal
thought or it may be, as some say, an abiding faith with the Indian people at all points of time. That
is not material. What is material is that it is a constitutional goal and a basic feature of the
Constitution as affirmed in Kesavananda, Bharati and Indira N. Gandhi v. Raj Narain . Any step
inconsistent with this constitutional policy is, in plain words, un-constitutional. This does not mean
that the State has no say whatsoever in matters of religion. Laws can be made regulating the secular
affairs of temples, mosques and other places of worships and maths, (See S. P. Mittal v. Union of
India .

at page 233 (of SCC) : at p. 3152 of AIR Ahmadi, J. while expressing agreement with the views of
Sawant, Ramaswamy and Jeevan Reddy, JJ. stated thus:

Notwithstanding the fact that the words 'Socialist' and 'Secular' were added in the Preamble of the
Constitution in 1976 by the 42nd Amendment, the concept of secularism was very much embedded
in our constitutional philosophy. The term 'Secular' has advisedly not been defined presumably
because it is a very elastic term not capable of a precise definition and perhaps best left undefined.
By this amendment what was implicit was made explicit...(at page 77) (of SCC): (at p. 2992 of AIR).

40. It is clear from the constitutional scheme that it guarantees equality in the matter of religion to
all individuals and groups irrespective of their faith emphasising that there is no religion of the State
itself. The Preamble of the Constitution read in particular with Articles 25 to 28 emphasises this
aspect and indicates that it is in this manner the concept of secularism embodied in the
constitutional scheme as a creed adopted by the Indian people has to be understood while
examining the constitutional validity of any legislation on the touchstone of the Constitution. The
concept of secularism is one facet of the right to equality woven as the central golden thread in the
fabric depicting the pattern of the scheme in our Constitution.

41. It is useful in this context to refer to some extracts from a paper on "Law in a Pluralist Society"
by M.N. Venkatachaliah, J., as he then was, (one of us). Therein, he said:

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 23


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

The purpose of law in plural societies is not the progressive assimilation of the minorities in the
majoritarian milieu. This would not solve the problem; but would vainly seek to dissolve it. What
then is its purpose? Again in the words of Lord Scarman (Minority Rights in a Plural Society, p. 63):

...The purpose of the law must be not to extinguish the groups which make the society but to devise
political, social and legal means of preventing them from falling apart and so destroying the plural
society of which they are members.

In a pluralist, secular polity law is perhaps the greatest integrating force. A cultivated respect for law
and its institutions and symbols; a pride in the country's heritage and achievements faith that
people live under the protection of an adequate legal system are indispensable for sustaining unity
in pluralist diversity. Rawlsian pragmatism of "justice as fairness" to serve as an 'overlapping
consensus' and deep seated agreements on fundamental questions of basic structure of society for
deeper social unity is a political conception of justice rather than a comprehensive moral
conception.

xxx xxx What are the limitations on laws dealing with issues of pluralism? Law should not
accentuate the depth of the cleavage and become in itself a source of aggravation of the very
condition it intends to remedy....

xxx xxx To those that live in fear and insecurity all the joys and bright colours of life are etched
away. There is need to provide a reassurance and a sense of belonging. It is not enough to say "look
here.... I never promised you a rose garden. I never promised you perfect justice." But perfect justice
may be an unattainable goal. At least it must be a tolerable accommodation of the conflicting
interests of society. Though there may really be no "Royal road to attain such accommodations
concretely". Bentham alluded to the pursuit of equality as 'Disappointment-preventing' principle as
the principle of distributive justice and part of the security-providing principle.

42. Keeping in mind the true concept of secularism, and the role of judiciary in a pluralist society, as
also the duty of the Court in interpreting such a law, we now proceed to consider the submissions
with reference to the provisions of the enactment.

43. It is necessary to first construe the provisions of Act No. 33 of 1993 with reference to which the
grounds of challenge have to be examined.

44. The meaning of the word "vest" as earlier stated has different shades taking colour from the
context in which it is used. It does not necessarily mean absolute vesting in every situation and is
capable of bearing the meaning of a limited vesting, being limited, in title as well as duration. Thus
the meaning of "vest" used in Section 3 has to be determined in the light of the text of the statute
and the purpose of its use. If the vesting be absolute being unlimited in any manner, there can be no
limitation on the right to transfer or manage the acquired property. In the event of absolute vesting,
there is no need for a provision enabling the making of transfer after acquisition of the property,
right to transfer being a necessary incident of absolute title. Enactment of Section 6 in the same
statute as a part of the scheme of acquisition of the property vesting it in the Central Government is,

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 24


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

therefore, contra indication of the vesting under Section 3 in the Central Government being as an
absolute owner without any particular purpose in view. The right to manage and deal with the
property in any manner of an absolute owner being unrestricted, enactment of Section 7 which
introduces an express limitation on the power of management and administration of property
comprising the disputed area till the transfer is effected in the manner indicated in Section 6, is a
clear indication of the acquisition of only a limited and not an absolute title in the disputed property
by the Central Government, Sections 6 and 7 read together give a clear indication that the
acquisition of the disputed property by this Act is for a particular purpose and when the purpose is
achieved the property has to be transferred in the manner provided in Section 6; and the Central
Government is obliged to maintain the status quo as in existence on 7th January, 1993 at the site
where the disputed structure stood, till the time of that transfer. The purpose to be effectuated is
evidently the resolution of the dispute which has defied the steps taken for its resolution by
negotiations earlier. The modes of resolution of the dispute contemplated are referrable to, and
connected with, the question referred for the decision of this Court under Article 143(1) of the
Constitution. It is a different matter that the dispute may not be capable of resolution merely by
answer of the question referred. That is material for deciding the validity of Section 4(3) of the Act
which brings about the abatement of all pending suits and legal proceedings indicating that the
alternate dispute resolution mechanism adopted is only the Reference made under Article 143(1) of
the Constitution.

45. If the Presidential Reference is incapable of satisfying the requirement of alternate dispute
resolution mechanism and, therefore, has the effect of denying a judicial remedy to the parties to the
suit, this itself may have a bearing on the constitutional validity of Section 4(3) of the Act. In that
event Section 4(3) may be rendered invalid resulting in revival of all pending suits and legal
proceedings sought to be abated by Section 4(3), the effect being that any transfer by the Central
Government of the acquired disputed property under Section 6 would be guided and regulated by
the adjudication of the dispute in the revived suits. This is, of course, subject to the severability of
Section 4(3).

46. It is, therefore, clear that for ascertaining the true meaning of the word "vest" used in Section 3
we must first consider the validity of Sections 6 and 7 of the Act on which it largely depends. If
Sections 6 and 7 of the Act, which limit the title of the Central Government cannot be sustained, the
limitation read in Section 3 to the title acquired by the Central Government under the Act through
this mode would disappear. For this reason, we proceed to examine the validity of Sections 6 and 7.

47. Between Sections 6 and 7, it is Section 7 which impose a greater restriction on the power of
Central Government. It gives the mandate that in management of the area over which the disputed
structure stood, it has to maintain status quo as it existed at the time of acquisition on 7th January,
1993. Such a limitation is clearly inconsistent with the acquisition of absolute ownership of the
property. The validity of Section 7(2) of the Act must, therefore, be considered.

48. Section 7 as we read it, is a transitory provision, intended to maintain status quo in the disputed
area, till transfer of the property is made by the Central Government on resolution of the dispute.
This is to effectuate the purpose of that transfer and to make it meaningful avoiding any possibility

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 25


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

of frustration of the exercise as a result of any change in the existing situation in the disputed area
during the interregnum. Unless status quo is ensured, the final outcome on resolution of the dispute
may be frustrated by any change made in the disputed area which may frustrate the implementation
of the result in favour of the successful party and render it meaningless. A direction to maintain
status quo in the disputed property is a well-known method and the usual order made during the
pendency of a dispute for preserving the property and protecting the interest of the true owner till
the adjudication is made. A change in the existing situation is fraught with the danger of prejudicing
the rights of the true owner, yet to be determined. This itself is a clear indication that the exercise
made is to find out the true owner of the disputed area, to maintain status quo therein during the
interregnum and to hand it over to the true owner found entitled to it.

49. The question now is whether the provision in Section 7 containing the mandate to maintain the
status quo existing at the disputed site as on 7th January, 1993 is a slant in favour of the Hindu
community, intended to perpetuate an injustice done to the Muslim community by demolition of the
mosque on 6th December, 1992 and, therefore, it amounts to an anti-secular or discriminatory act
rendering the provision unconstitutional. For this purpose it is necessary to recall the situation as it
existed on 7th January, 1993 along with the significant events leading to that situation. It is
necessary to bear in mind the comparative use of the disputed area and the right of worship
practised therein, by the two communities on 7th January, 1993 and for a significant period
immediately preceding it. A reference to the comparative user during that period by the two
communities would indicate whether the provision in Section 7 directing maintenance of status quo
till resolution of the dispute and the transfer by the Central Government contemplated by Section 6
is slanted towards the Hindu community to render the provision violative of the basic feature of
secularism or the rights to equality and freedom of religion.

50. As earlier stated, worship by Hindu devotees of the idols installed on the Ram chabutra which
stood on the disputed site within the courtyard of the disputed structure had been performed
without any objection by the Muslims even prior to the shifting of those idols from the Ram
chabutra into the disputed structure in December 1949; in one of the suits filed in January 1950, the
trial court passed interim orders whereby the idols remained at the place where they were installed
in 1949 and worship of the idols there by the Hindu devotees continued this interim order was
confirmed by the High Court in April 1955; the District Judge ordered the opening of the lock placed
on a grill leading to the sanctum-sanctorum of the shrine in the disputed structure on 1st February,
1986 and permitted worship of the idols there to Hindu devotees; and this situation continued till
demolition of the structure on 6th December, 1992 when Ram chabutra also was demolished. It was
only as a result of the act of demolition on 6th December, 1992 that the worship by the Hindu
devotees in general of the idols at that place was interrupted. Since the time of demolition, worship
of the idols by a Pujari alone is continuing. This is how the right of worship of the idols practised by
Hindu devotees for a long time from much prior to 1949 in the Ram chabutra within the disputed
site has been interrupted since the act of demolition on 6th December, 1992 restricting the worship
of the idols since then to only by one Pujari. On the other hand, at least since December 1949, the
Muslims have not been offering worship at any place in the disputed site though, it may turn out at
the trial of the suits that they had a right to do so.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 26


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

51. The communal holocaust unleashed in the country disrupting the prevailing communal harmony
as a result of the demolition of the structure on 6th December, 1992 is well known to require further
mention. Any step taken to arrest escalation of communal tension and to achieve communal accord
and harmony can, by no stretch of argumentation, be termed non-secular much less anti-secular or
against the concept of secularism - a creed of the Indian people embedded in the ethos.

52. The narration of facts indicates that the acquisition of properties under the Act affects the rights
of both the communities and not merely those of the Muslim community. The interest claimed by
the Muslims is only over the disputed site where the mosque stood before its demolition. The
objection of the Hindus to this claim has to be adjudicated. The remaining entire property acquired
under the Act is such over which no title is claimed by the Muslims. A large part thereof comprises
of properties of Hindus of which the title is not even in dispute. The justification given for
acquisition of the larger area including the property respecting which title is not disputed is that the
same is necessary to ensure that the final outcome of adjudication should not be rendered
meaningless by the existence of properties belonging to Hindus in the vicinity of the disputed
structure in case the Muslims are found entitled to the disputed site. This obviously means that in
the event of the Muslims succeeding in the adjudication of the dispute requiring the disputed
structure to be handed over to the Muslim community, their success should not be thwarted by
denial of proper access to, and enjoyment of rights in, the disputed area by exercise of rights of
ownership of Hindu owners of the adjacent properties. Obviously, it is for this reason that the
adjacent area has also been acquired to make available to the successful party, that part of it which is
considered necessary, for proper enjoyment of the fruits of success on the" final outcome of the
adjudication. It is clear that one of the purposes of the acquisition of the adjacent properties is the
ensurement of the effective enjoyment of the disputed site by the Muslim community in the event of
its success in the litigation; and acquisition of the adjacent area is incidental to the main purpose
and cannot be termed unreasonable. The "Manas Bhawan" and "Sita ki Rasoi", both belonging to the
Hindus, are buildings which closely overlook the disputed site and are acquired because they are
strategic in locations in relation to the disputed area. The necessity of acquiring adjacent temples or
religious buildings in view of their proximity to the disputed structure area, which forms a unique
class by itself, is permissible. (See M. Padmanabha Iyengar v. Govt. of Andhra Pradesh AIR 1990
Andh Pra 357 and Akhara Shri Braham Buta, Amritsar v. State of Punjab AIR 1989 Punj & Har 1981.
We approve the principle stated in these decisions since it serves a larger purpose.

53. However, at a later stage when the exact area acquired which is needed", for achieving the
professed purpose of acquisition, can be determined, it would not merely be permissible but also
desirable that the superfluous excess area is released from acquisition and reverted to its earlier
owner. The challenge to acquisition of any part of the adjacent area on the ground that it is
unnecessary for achieving the objective of settling the dispute relating to the disputed area cannot be
examined at this stage but, in case the superfluous area is not returned to its owner even after the
exact area needed for the purpose is finally determined, it would be open to the owner of any such
property to then challenge the superfluous acquisition being unrelated to the purpose of acquisition.
Rejection of the challenge on this ground to acquisition at this stage, by the undisputed owners of
any such property situate in the vicinity of the disputed area, is with the reservation of this liberty to
them. There is no contest to their claim of quashing the acquisition of the adjacent properties by

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 27


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

anyone except the Central Government which seeks to justify the acquisition on the basis of
necessity. On the construction of the statute made by us, this appears to be the logical, appropriate
and just view to take in respect of such adjacent properties in which none other than the undisputed
owner claims title and interest.

54. It may also be mentioned that even as Ayodhya is said to be of particular significance to the
Hindus as a place of pilgrimage because of the ancient belief that Lord Rama was born there, the
mosque was of significance for the Muslim community as an ancient mosque built by Mir Baqi in
1528 A.D. As a mosque, it was a religious place of worship by the Muslims. This indicates the
comparative significance of the disputed site to the two communities and also that the impact of
acquisition is equally on the right and interest of the Hindu community. Mention of this aspect is
made only in the context of the argument that the statute as a whole, not merely Section 7 thereof, is
anti-secular being slanted in favour of the Hindus and against the Muslims.

55. Section 7(2) of the Act freezes the situation admittedly in existence on 7th January, 1993 which
was a lesser right of worship for the Hindu devotees than that in existence earlier for a long time till
the demolition of the disputed structure on 6th December, 1992; and it does not create a new
situation more favourable to the Hindu community amounting to conferment on them of a larger
right of worship in the disputed site than that practised till 6th December, 1992. Maintenance of
status quo as on 7th January, 1993 does not, therefore, confer or have the effect of granting to the
Hindu community any further benefit thereby. It is also pertinent to bear in mind that the persons
responsible for demolition of the mosque on 6th December, 1992 were some miscreants who cannot
be identified and equated with the entire Hindu community and, therefore, the act of vandalism so
perpetrated by the miscreants cannot be treated as an act of the entire Hindu community for the
purpose of adjudging the constitutionality of the enactment. Strong reaction against, and
condemnation by the Hindus of the demolition of the structure in general bears eloquent testimony
to this fact. Rejection of Bhartiya Janata Party at the hosting in the subsequent elections in Uttar
Pradesh is another circumstance to that effect. The miscreants who demolished the mosque had no
religion, caste or creed except the character of a criminal and the mere incident of birth of such a
person in any particular community cannot attach the stigma of his crime to the community in
which he was born.

56. Another effect of the freeze imposed by Section 7(2) of the Act is that it ensures that there can be
no occasion for the Hindu community to seek to enlarge the scope of the practice of worship by
them as on 7th January, 1993 during the interregnum till the final adjudication on the basis that in
fact a larger right of worship by them was in vogue up to 6th December, 1992. It is difficult to
Visualise how Section 7(2) can be construed as a slant in favour of the Hindu community and,
therefore, anti-secular. The provision does not curtail practice of right of worship of the Muslim
community in the disputed area, I there having been de facto no exercise of the practice or worship
by them there at least i since December 1949; and it maintains status quo by the freeze to the
reduced right of worship by the Hindus as in existence on 7th January, 1993. However, confining
exercise of the right of worship of the Hindu community to its reduced form within the disputed
area as on 7th January, 1993, lesser than that exercised till the demolition on 6th December, 1992,
by the freeze enacted in Section 7(2) appears to be reasonable and just in view of the fact that the

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 28


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

miscreants who demolished the mosque are suspected to be persons professing to practise the
Hindu religion. The Hindu community must, therefore, bear the cross on its chest, for the misdeed
of the miscreants reasonably suspected to belong to their religious fold.

57. This is the proper perspective, we say, in which the statute as a whole and Section 7 in particular
must be viewed. Thus the factual foundation for challenge to the statute as a whole and Section 7(2)
in particular on the ground of secularism, a basic feature of the Constitution, and the rights to
equality and freedom of religion is non-existent.

58. Reference may be made to the statements of the Central Government soon after the demolition
on 7th December, 1992 and 27th December, 1992 wherein it was said that the mosque would be
rebuilt. It was urged that the action taken on 7th January, 1993 to I issue an Ordinance, later
replaced by the Act, and simultaneously to make the Reference to this Court under Article 143(1) of
the Constitution amounts to resiling from the earlier statements for the benefit of the Hindu
community. It is sufficient to say that the I earlier statements so made cannot limit the power of the
Parliament and are not material for adjudging the constitutional validity of the enactment. The
validity of the statute has to be determined on the touchstone of the Constitution and not any
statements made prior to it. We have therefore no doubt that Section 7 does not suffer from the
infirmity of being anti-secular or discriminatory to render it unconstitutional.

59. We would now examine the validity of Section 6. Sub-section (1) of Section 6 empowers the
Central Government to direct vesting of the area acquired or any part thereof in another authority or
body or trust. This power extends to the entire acquired area or any part thereof. This is
notwithstanding anything contained in Sections 3, 4, 5 and 7. Section 3 provides for acquisition of
the area and its vesting in the Central Government. It is, therefore, made clear by Sub-section (1) of
Section 6 that the acquisition of the area and its vesting in the Central Government is not a
hindrance to the same being vested thereafter by the Central Government in another authority or
body or trust. Section 4 relates to the effect of vesting and Section 5 to the power of the Central
Government to secure possession of the area vested, with the corresponding obligation of the person
or the State Government in possession thereof to deliver it to the Central Government or the
authorised person. Section 4(3) relating to abatement of pending suits and legal proceedings would
be considered separately. Section 7 which we have already upheld, relates to management and
administration of the property by the Central Government or the authorised person during the
interregnum till the exercise of power by the Central Government under Section 6(1). Section 7 has
been construed by us as a transitory provision to maintain status quo in the disputed area and for
proper management of the entire property acquired during the interregnum. Thus, Sub-section (1)
of Section 6 read with Sub-section (2) of Section 7 is an in-built indication in the statute of the intent
that acquisition of the disputed area and its resting in the Central Government is not absolute but
for the purpose of its subsequent transfer to the person found entitled to it as a result of
adjudication of the dispute for the resolution of which this step was taken, any enactment of the
statute is part of that exercise. Making of the Reference under Article 143(1) simultaneously with the
issuance of Ordinance, later replaced by the Act, on the same day also is an indication of the
legislative intent that the acquisition of the disputed area was not meant to be absolute but limited
to holding it as a statutory receiver till resolution of the dispute; and then to transfer it, in

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 29


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

accordance with, and in terms of the final determination made in the mechanism adopted for
resolution of the dispute. Sub-section (2) of Section 6 indicates consequence of the action taken
under Sub-section (1) by providing that as a result of the action taken under Sub-section (1), any
right, title and interest in relation to the area or part thereof would be deemed to have become those
of the transferee. Sub-section (3) of Section 6 enacts that the provisions of Sections 4, 5, 7 and 11
shall, so far as may be, apply in relation to such authority or body or trustees as they apply in
relation to the Central Government. The expression "so far as may be" is indicative of the fact that
all or any of these provisions may or may not be applicable to the transferee under Sub-section (1).
This provides for the situation of transfer being made, if necessary, at any stage and of any part of
the property, since Section 7(2) is applicable only to the disputed area. The provision however does
not countenance the dispute remaining unresolved or the situation continuing perpetually. The
embargo on transfer till adjudication, and in terms thereof, to be read in Section 6(1), relates only to
the disputed area, while transfer of any part of the excess area, retention of which till adjudication of
the dispute relating to the disputed area may not be necessary, is not inhibited till then, since the
acquisition of the excess area is absolute subject to the duty to restore it to the owner if its retention
is found, to be unnecessary, as indicated. The meaning of the word "vest" in Sections 3 and 6 has to
be so construed differently in relation to the disputed area and the excess area in its vicinity.

60. Acquisition of the adjacent undisputed area belonging to Hindus has been attacked on the
ground that it was unnecessary since ownership of the same is undisputed. Reason for acquisition of
the larger area adjacent to the disputed area has been indicated. It is, therefore, not unrelated to the
resolution of the dispute which is the reason for the entire acquisition. Even though, prima facie, the
acquisition of the adjacent area in respect of which there is no dispute of title and which belongs to
Hindus may appear to be a slant against the Hindus, yet on closer scrutiny it is not so since it is for
the larger national purpose of maintaining and promoting communal harmony and in consonance
with the creed of secularism. Once it is found that it is permissible to acquire an area in excess of the
disputed area alone, adjacent to it, to effectuate the purpose of acquisition of the disputed area and
to implement the outcome of the final adjudication between the parties to ensure that in the event of
success of the Muslim community in the dispute their success remains meaningful, the extent of
adjacent area considered necessary is in the domain of policy and not a matter for judicial scrutiny
or a ground for testing the constitutional validity of the enactment, as earlier indicated. However, it
is with the caveat of the Central Government's duty to restore it to its owner, as indicated earlier, if it
is found later to be unnecessary; and reservation of liberty to the owner to challenge the needless
acquisition when the total need has been determined.

61. We find no infirmity in Section 6 also to render it unconstitutional.

62. The status of the Central Government as a result of vesting by virtue of Section 3 of the Act is,
therefore, of a statutory receiver in relation to the disputed area, coupled with a duty to manage and
administer the disputed area maintaining status quo therein till the final outcome of adjudication of
the longstanding dispute relating to the disputed structure at Ayodhya. Vesting in the Central
Government of the area in excess of the disputed area, is, however, absolute. The meaning of "vest"
has these different shades in Sections 3 and 6 in relation to the two parts of the entire area acquired
by the Act.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 30


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

63. The question now is of the mode of adjudication of the dispute, on the final outcome of which
the action contemplated by Section 6(1) of the Act of effecting transfer of the disputed area has to be
made by the Central Government.

64. Sub-section (3) of Section 4 provides for abatement of all pending suits and legal proceedings in
respect of the right, title and interest relating to any property which has vested in the Central
Government under Section 3. The rival claims to the disputed area which were to be adjudicated in
the pending suits can no longer be determined therein as a result of the abatement of the suits. This
also results in extinction of the several defences raised by the Muslim community including that of
adverse possession of the disputed area for over 400 years since construction of the mosque there in
1528 A.D. by Mir Baqi. Ostensibly, the alternate dispute resolution mechanism adopted is that of a
simultaneous Reference made the same day under Article 143(1) of the Constitution to this Court for
decision of the question referred. It is clear from the issues framed in those suits that the core
question for determination in the suits is not covered by the Reference made, and it also does not
include therein the defences raised by the Muslim community. It is also clear that the answer to the
question referred, whatever it may be, will not lead to the answer of the core question for
determination in the pending suits and it will not, by itself, resolve the long-standing dispute
relating to the disputed area. Reference made under Article 143(1) cannot, therefore, be treated as
an effective alternate dispute resolution mechanism in substitution of the pending suits which are
abated by Section 4(3) of the Act. For this reason, it was urged, that the abatement of pending suits
amounts to denial of the judicial remedy available to the Muslim community for resolution of the
dispute and grant of the relief on that basis in accordance with the scheme of redress under the rule
of law envisaged by the Constitution. The validity of Sub-section (3) of Section 4 is assailed on this
ground.

65. To appreciate the stand of the Central Government on this point, we permitted the learned
Solicitor General to make a categorical statement for the Union of India in this behalf. The final
statement made ,by the learned Solicitor General of India in writing dated 14-9-1994 forming a part
of the record, almost at the conclusion of the hearing, also does not indicate that the answer to the
question referred would itself be decisive of the core question in controversy between the parties to
the suits relating to the claim over the disputed site. According to the statement, the Central
Government proposes to resort to a process of negotiation between the rival claimants after getting
the answer to the question referred, and if the negotiations fail, then to adopt such course as it may
find appropriate in the circumstances. There can be no doubt, in these circumstances, that the
Special Reference made under Article 143(1) of the Constitution cannot be construed as an effective
alternate dispute resolution mechanism to permit substitution of the pending suits and legal
proceedings by the mode adopted of making this Reference. In our opinion, this fact alone is
sufficient to invalidate Sub-section (3) of Section 4 of the Act. (See Smt. Indira Nehru Gandhi/Shri
Raj Narain v. Shri Raj Narain/Smt. Indira Nehru Gandhi .) We accordingly declare Sub-section (3)
of Section 4 to be unconstitutional. However, Sub-section (3) of Section 4 is severable, and,
therefore, its invalidity is not an impediment to the remaining statute being upheld as valid.

66. There is no serious challenge to the validity of any other provision of the Act except a feeble
attack on Section 8. For Section 8, it was urged, that performance of the exercise of payment of

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 31


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

compensation thereunder would be impractical in respect of the property of which ownership is in


dispute. This argument itself does not visualise any such difficulty in respect of the remaining
undisputed property. In the view we have taken that the vesting in the Central Government by virtue
of Section 3 in relation to the disputed area is only as a statutory receiver, and Section 4(3) being
declared invalid results in revival of the pending suits and legal proceedings, the application of
Section 8 would present no difficulty, Section 8 is meant only for the property acquired absolutely,
other than the disputed area, being adjacent to, and in the vicinity of the disputed area. The
disputed area being taken-over by the Central Government only as a statutory receiver, there is no
question of payment of compensation for the same as it is meant to be handed over to the successful
party in the suits, in terms of the ultimate judicial verdict therein, for the faithful implementation of
the judicial decision. The exercise of the power under Section 8, by the Central Government is to be
made only then in respect of the disputed area. In accordance with the final judicial decision,
preserving status quo therein in terms of Section 7(2) till then. No further discussion of this aspect is
necessary.

67. A construction which the language of the statute can bear and promotes a larger national
purpose must be preferred to a strict literal construction tending to promote factionalism and
discord.

Mosque-Immunity From Acquisition

68. A larger question raised at the hearing was that there is no power in the State to acquire any
mosque, irrespective of its significance to practice of the religion of Islam. The argument is that a
mosque, even if it is of no particular significance to the practice of religion of Islam, cannot be
acquired because of the special status of a mosque in Mahome-dan Law. This argument was not
confined to a mosque of particular significance without which right to practise the religion is not
conceivable because it may form an essential and integral part of the practice of Islam. In the view
that we have taken of limited vesting in the Central Government as a statutory receiver of the
disputed area in which the mosque stood, for the purpose of handing it over to the party found
entitled to it, and requiring it to maintain status quo therein till then, this question may not be of
any practical significance since there is no absolute divesting of the true owner of that property. We
may observe that the proposition advanced does appear to us to be too broad for acceptance in as
much as it would restrict the sovereign power of acquisition even where such acquisition is essential
for an undoubted national purpose, if the mosque happens to be located in the property acquired as
an ordinary place of worship without any particular significance attached to it for the practice of
Islam as a religion. It would also lead to the strange result that in secular India there would be
discrimination against the religions, other than Islam. In view of the vehemence with which this
argument was advanced by Dr. Rajeev Dhawan and Shri Abdul Mannan to contend that the
acquisition is invalid for this reason alone, it is necessary for us to decide this question.

69. It has been contended that acquisition of a mosque violates the right given under Articles 25 and
26 of the Constitution of India. This requires reference to the status of a mosque under the
Mahomedan Law.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 32


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

70. Even prior to the Constitution, places of worship had enjoyed a special sanctity in India. In order
to give special protection to places of worship and to prevent hurting the religious sentiments of
followers of different religions in British India, Chapter XV of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 was
enacted. This Chapter exclusively deals with the offences relating to religion in Sections 295, 295A,
296, 297 and 298 of the Indian Penal Code. Lord Macaulay in drafting the Indian Penal Code, had
indicated the principle on which it was desirable for all governments to act and the British
Government in India could not depart from it without risking the disintegration of society. The
danger of ignoring the religious sentiments of the people of India which could lead to spread of
dissatisfaction throughout the country was also indicated.

71. In British India, the right to worship of Muslims in a mosque and Hindus in a temple had always
been recognised as a civil right. Prior to 1950, the Indian Courts in British India had maintained the
balance between the different communities or sects in respect of their right of worship.

72. Even prior to the guarantee of freedom of religion in the Constitution of India, Chief Justice
Turner in Muthialu Chetti v. Bapun Saib (1880) ILR 2 Madras 140, had held that during the British
Administration all religions were to be treated equally with the State maintaining neutrality having
regard to public welfare. In Sundram Cheti v. The Queen (1883) ILR 6 Madras 203 (FB) approving
ILR 2 Madras 140, Chief Justice Turner said:

... But with reference to these and to other privileges claimed on the ground of caste or creed, 1 may
observe that they had their origin in times when a State religion influenced the public and private
law of the country, and are hardly compatible with the principles which regulate British
administration, the equal rights of all citizens and the complete neutrality of the State in matters of
religion... When anarchy or absolutism yield place to well ordered liberty, change there must be, but
change in a direction which should command the assent of the intelligence of the country.

73. In Mosque known as Masjid Shahid Ganj v. Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee,
Amritsar AIR 1938 Lahore 369 (FB), it was held that where a mosque has been adversely possessed
by non-Muslims, it lost its sacred character as mosque. Hence, the view that once a consecrated
mosque, it remains always a place of worship as a mosque was not the Mahomedan Law of India as
approved by Indian Courts. It was further held by the majority that a mosque in India was an
immovable property and the right of worship at a particular place is lost when the right to property
on which it stands is lost by adverse possession. The conclusion reached in the minority judgment of
Din Mohd., J. is not the Mahomedan Law of British India. The majority view expressed by the
learned Chief Justice of Lahore High Court was approved by the Privy Council in AIR 1940 PC 116,
in the appeal against the said decision of the Lahore High Court. The Privy Council held:

...It is impossible to read into the modern Limitation Acts any exception for property made wakf for
the purposes of mosque whether the purpose be merely to provide money for the upkeep and
conduct of a mosque or to provide a site and building for the purpose. While their Lordships have
every sympathy with the religious sentiment which would ascribe sanctity and inviolability to a place
of worship, they cannot under the Limitation Act accept the contentions that such a building cannot
be possessed adversely to the wakf, or that it is not so possessed so long as it is referred to as

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 33


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

"mosque" or unless the building is raged to the ground or loses the appearance which reveals its
original purpose.

74. It may also be indicated that the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 is applicable uniformly to all
properties including places of worship. Right of acquisition thereunder was guided by the express
provisions of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 and executive instructions were issued to regulate
acquisition of places of worship. Clause 102 of the Manual of Land Acquisition of the State of
Maharashtra which deals with the acquisition of religious places like churches, temples and
mosques, is of significance in this context.

75. The power of acquisition is the sovereign or prerogative power of the State to acquire property.
Such power exists independent of Article 300A of the Constitution or the earlier Article 31 of the
Constitution which merely indicate the limitations on the power of acquisition by the State. The
Supreme Court from the beginning has consistently upheld the sovereign power of the State to
acquire property. B. K. Mukherjee, J. (as he then was) held in Chiranjitlal Chowdhuri v. Union of
India as under:

It is a right inherent in every sovereign to take and appropriate private property belonging to
individual citizens for public use. This right, which is described as eminent domain in American law,
is like the power of taxation, an off-spring of political necessity, and it is supposed to be based upon
an implied reservation by Government that private property acquired by its citizens under its
protection may be taken or its use controlled for public benefit irrespective of the wishes of the
owner...

76. Patanjali Sastri, C.J., in the State of West Bengal v. Subodh Gopal Bose held as under:

...and among such powers was included the power of "acquisition or requisitioning of property" for
Union and State purposes in entry No. 33 of List I and No. 36 of List II respectively. Thus, what is
called the power of eminent domain, which is assumed to be inherent in the sovereignty of the State
according to Continental and American jurists and is accordingly not expressly provided for in the
American Constitution, is made the subject of an express grant in our Constitution....

77. It appears from various decisions rendered by this Court, referred later, that subject to the
protection under Articles 25 and 26 of the Constitution, places of religious worship like mosques,
churches, temples etc. can be acquired under the State's sovereign power of acquisition. Such
acquisition per se does not violate either Article 25 or Article 26 of the Constitution. The decisions
relating to taking over of the management have no bearing on the sovereign power of the State to
acquire property.

78. Khajamian Wakf Estates v. State of Madras , has held :

It was next urged that by acquiring the properties belonging to religious denominations the
legislature violated Article 26(c) and (d) which provide that religious denominations shall have the
right to own and acquire movable and immovable property and administer such property in

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 34


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

accordance with law. These provisions do not take away the right of the State to acquire property
belonging to religious denominations. Those denominations can own or acquire properties and
administer them in accordance with law. That does not mean that the property owned by them
cannot be acquired. As a result of acquisition they cease to own that property. Thereafter their right
to administer that property ceases because it is no longer their property. Article 26 does not
interfere with the right of the State to acquire property.

79. Acharya Maharajshri Narandra Prasadji Anand Prasadji Maharaj v. State of Gujarat , has held :

...One thing is, however, clear that Article 26 guarantees inter alia the right to own and acquire
movable and immovable property for managing religious affairs. This right, however, cannot take
away the right of the State to compulsorily acquire property.... If, on the other hand, acquisition of
property of a religious denomination by the State can be proved to be such as to destroy or
completely negative its right to own and acquire movable and immovable property for even the
survival of a religious institution the question may have to be examined in a different light."
(Emphasis supplied)

80. It may be noticed that Article 25 does not contain any reference to property unlike Article 26 of
the Constitution. The right to practice, profess and propagate religion guaranteed under Article 25
of the Constitution does not necessarily include the right to acquire or own or possess property.
Similarly this right does not extend to the right of worship at any and every place of worship so that
any hindrance to worship at a particular place per se may infringe the religious freedom guaranteed
under Articles 25 and 26 of the Constitution The protection under Articles 25 and 26 of the
Constitution is to religious practice which forms an essential and integral part of the religion. A
practice may be a religious practice but not an. essential and integral part of practice of that religion.

81. While offer of prayer or worship is a religious practice, its offering at every location where such
prayers can be offered would not be an essential or integral part of such religious practice unless the
place has a particular significance for that religion so as to form an essential or integral part thereof.
Places of worship of any religion having particular significance for that religion, to make it an
essential or integral part of the religion, stand on a different footing and have to be treated
differently and more reverentially.

82. A five-Judge Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court, in Raja Suryapalsingh v. U.P. Govt., , held
:

Arguments have been advanced by learned Counsel on behalf of certain waqfs and Hindu religious
institutions based on Articles 25(1) and 26, Clause (c) of the Constitution....

It is said that a mutawalli's right to profess his religion is infringed if the waqf property is
compulsorily acquired, but the acquisition of that property under Article 31 (to which the right
conferred by Article 25 is expressly subject) has nothing to do with such rights and in no way
interferes with this exercise.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 35


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

83. It has been contended that a mosque enjoys a particular position in Muslim Law and once a
mosque is established and prayers are offered in such a mosque, the same remains for all time to
come a property of Allah and the same never reverts back to the donor or founder of the mosque and
any person professing Islamic faith can offer prayer in such a mosque and even if the structure is
demolished, the place remains the same where the Namaz can be offered. As indicated hereinbefore,
in British India, no such protection was given to a mosque and the mosque was subjected to the
provisions of statute of limitation thereby extinguishing the right of Muslim to offer prayers in a
particular mosque lost by adverse possession over that property.

,4. Section 3(26) of the General Clauses Act comprehends the categories of properties known to
Indian Law. Article 367 of the Constitution adopts this secular concept of property for purposes of
our Constitution. A temple, church or mosque etc. are essentially immovable properties and subject
to protection under Articles 25 and 26. Every immovable property is liable to be acquired. Viewed in
the proper perspective, a mosque does not enjoy any additional protection which is not available to
religious places of worship of other religions.

85. The correct position may be summarised thus. Under the Mahomedan Law applicable in India,
title to a mosque can be lost by adverse possession (See Mulla's Principles of Mahomedan Law, 19th
Edn. by M. Hidayatullah - Section 217 and AIR 1940 PC 1.16). If that is the position in law, there can
be no reason to hold that a mosque has a unique or special status, higher than that of the places of
worship of other religions in secular India to make it immune from acquisition by exercise of the
sovereign or prerogative power of the State. A mosque is not an essential part of the practice of the
religion of Islam and Namaz. (prayer) by Muslims can be offered anywhere, even in open.
Accordingly, its acquisition is not prohibited by the provisions in the Constitution of India.
Irrespective of the status of a mosque in an Islamic country for the purpose of immunity from
acquisition by the State in exercise of the sovereign power, its status and immunity from acquisition
in the secular ethos of India under the Constitution is the same and equal to that of the places of
worship of the other religions, namely, church, temple etc. It is neither more nor less than that of
the places of worship of the other religions. Obviously, the acquisition of any religious place is to be
made only in unusual and extraordinary situations for a larger national purpose keeping in view that
such acquisition should not result in extinction of the right to practice the religion, if the significance
of that place be such. Subject to this condition, the power of acquisition is available for a mosque
like any other place of worship of any religion. The right to worship is not at any and every place, so
long as it can be practised effectively, unless the right to worship at a particular place is itself an
integral part of that right.

MAINTAINABILITY OF THE REFERENCE

86. In the view that we have taken on the question of validity of the statute (Act No. 33 of 1993) and
as a result of upholding the validity of the entire statute except Section 4(3) thereof, resulting in
revival of the pending suits and legal proceedings wherein the dispute between the parties has to be
adjudicated, the Reference made under Article 143(1) becomes superfluous and unnecessary. For
this reason, it is unnecessary for us to examine the merits of the submissions made on the
maintainability of this Reference. We, accordingly, very respectfully decline to answer the Reference

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 36


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

and return the same.

RESULT

87. The result is that all the pending suits and legal proceedings stand revised, and they shall be
proceeded with, and decided, in accordance with law. It follows further as a result of the remaining
enactment being upheld as valid that the disputed area has vested in the Central Government as a
statutory receiver with a duty to manage and administer it in the manner provided in the Act
maintaining status quo therein by virtue of the freeze enacted in Section 7(2); and the Central
Government would exercise its power of vesting that property further in another authority or body
or trust in accordance with Section 6(1) of the Act in terms of the final adjudication in the pending
suits. The power of the courts in the pending legal proceedings to give directions to the Central
Government as a statutory receiver would be circumscribed and limited to the extent of the area left
open by the provisions of the Act. The Central Government would be bound to take all necessary
steps to implement the decision in the suits and other legal proceedings and to hand over the
disputed area to the party found entitled to, the same on the final adjudication made in the suits.
The parties to the suits would be entitled to amend their pleadings suitably in the light of our
decision.

88. Before we end, we would like to indicate the consequence if the entire Act had been held to be
invalid and then we had declined to answer the Reference on that conclusion. It would then result in
revival of the abated suits along with all the interim orders made therein. It would also then result
automatically in revival of the worship of the idols by Hindu devotees, which too has been stopped
from December 1992, with all its ramifications without granting any benefit to the Muslim
community whose practice of worship in the mosque (demolished on 6th December, 1992) had
come to a stop, for whatever reason, since at least December, 1949. This situation, unless altered
subsequently by any court order in the revived suits, would, therefore, continue during the pendency
of the litigation. This result could be no solace to the Muslims whose feelings are hurt as a result of
the demolition of mosque, must be assuaged in the manner best possible without giving cause for
any legitimate grievance to the other community leading to the possibility of reigniting communal
passions detrimental to the spirit of communal harmony in a secular State.

89. The best solution in the circumstances, on reyival of suits is, therefore, to maintain status quo as
on 7th January, 1993 when the law came into force modifying the interim orders in the suits to that
extent by curtailing the practice of worship by Hindus in the disputed area to the extent it stands
reduced under the Act instead of conferring on them the larger right available under the court
orders till intervention was made by legislation.

90. Section 7(2) achieves this purpose by freezing the interim arrangement for worship by Hindu
devotees reduced to this extent and curtails the larger right they enjoyed under the court orders,
ensuring that it cannot be enlarged till final adjudication of the dispute and consequent transfer of
the disputed area to the party found entitled to the same. This being the purpose and true effect of
Section 7(2), it promotes and strengthens the commitment of the nation to secularism instead of
negating it. To hold this provision as anti-secular and slanted in favour of the Hindu community

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 37


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

would be to frustrate an attempt to thwart anti-secularism and unwittingly support the forces which
were responsible for the events of 6th December, 1992.

GENERAL

91. Some general remarks are appropriate in the context. We must place on record our appreciation
and gratitude to the learned members of the Bar who assisted us at the hearing of this matter of
extraordinary and unusual importance to the national ethos. The learned Attorney General, the
learned Solicitor General, the learned Advocate General of Madhya Pradesh, the learned Advocate
General of Rajasthan, Shri F. S. Nariman, Shri Soli J. Sorabjee, Late Shri R.K. Garg, Dr. Rajeev
Dhawan, Shri Anil B. Divan, Shri Satish Chandra, Shri P. P. Rao, Shri Abdul Mannan, Shri O.P.
Sharma, Shri S. N. Mehta, Shri P. N. Duda, Shri V.M. Tarkunde, Shri Ashok H. Desai, Shri Shakil
Ahmed Syed, Ms. N. Bhagwat and the other learned Counsel who assisted them rendered their
valuable assistance with great zeal after considerable industry in the highest traditions of the Bar.
Shri Deoki Nandan Agarwal, one of the parties in a suit as the next friend of the Deity appeared in
person and argued with complete detachment. Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui also appeared in person. It was
particularly heartening to find that the cause of the Muslim community was forcefully advocated
essentially by the members of the Bar belonging to other communities. Their commitment to the
cause is evident from the fact that Shri Abdul Mannan who appeared for the Sunni Central Wakf
Board endorsed the arguments on behalf of the Muslim community. The reciprocal gesture or. Shri
Mannan was equally heartening and indicative of mutual trust. The congenial atmosphere in which
the entire hearing took place was a true manifestation of secularism in practice.

92. The hearing left us wondering why the dispute cannot be resolved in the same manner and in the
same spirit in which the matter was argued, particularly when some of the participants are common
and are in a position to negotiate and resolve the dispute. We do hope this hearing has been
commencement of that process which will ensure an amicable resolution of the dispute and it will
not end with the hearing of this matter. This is a matter suited essentially to resolution by
negotiations which does not end in a winner and a loser while adjudication leads to that end. It is in
the national interest that there is no loser at the end of the. process adopted for resolution of the
dispute so that the final outcome does not leave behind any rancour in anyone. This can be achieved
by a negotiated solution on the basis of which a decree can be obtained in terms of such solution in
these suits. Unless a solution is found which leaves everyone happy, that cannot be the beginning for
continued harmony between "we the people of India".

93. In 1893 World's Parliament of Religions was held in Chicago. The Chairman of the Parliament
John Henry Borrows indicated its object and observed, "It was felt to be wise and advantageous that
the religions of the world, which are competing at so many points in all the continents, should be
brought together not for contention but for loving conference, in one room." In the Parliament,
Swami Vivekananda spoke of 'Hinduism as the religion that has taught the world both tolerance and
universal acceptance' and described the diversity of religions as 'the same light coming through
different colors". The assembly recited the Lord's Prayer as a universal prayer and Rabbi Emli
Hirsch proclaimed "The day of national religions is past. The God of the universe speaks of all
mankind". At the closing session, Chicago lawyer Charles Bonney, one of the Parliament's Chief

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 38


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

Visionaries, declared, "Henceforth the religions of the world will make war, not on each other, but
on the giant evils that afflict mankind". Have we, during the last century, moved towards the
professed goal ?

As 1993 began, communal violence returned to India, sparked by the Controversy over a
16th-Century mosque said to stand on the ruins of an ancient Hindu temple honouring Lord Rama".
It may be said that 'fundamentalism and pluralism pose the two challenges that people of all
religious traditions face'; and "to the fundamentalists, the borders of religious certainty are tightly
guarded; to the pluralist, the borders are good fences where one meets the neighbour. To many
fundamentalists, secularism, seen as the denial of religious claims, is the enemy; to pluralists,
secularism, seen as the separation of Government from the. domination of a single religion, is the
essential concomitant of religious diversity and the . protection of religious freedom". The present
state may be summarised thus: "At present, the greatest religions tensions are not those between
any one religion and another; they are the tensions between the fundamentalist arid the pluralist in
each and every religious tradition". The spirit of universalism popular in the late 19th century was
depicted by Max Muller who said, "The living kernel of religion can be found. I believe, in almost
every creed, however much the husk may vary. And think what that means: It means that above and
beneath and behind all religions there is one eternal, one universal religion.

94. The year 1993 has been described as the "Year of Inter-religious Understanding and
Co-operation". Is that century old spirit of conciliation and co-operation reflected in reactions of the
protagonists of different religious faith to justify 1993 being called the "Year of Inter-religious
Understanding and Co-operation"? ("Reflections on Religious Diversity" by Diana L. ECK in SPAN
September, 1994). It is this hope which has to be realised in the future.

95. A neutral perception of the requirement for communal harmony is to be found in the Baha'i
faith. In a booklet, "Communal Harmony - India's Greatest Challenge', forming part of the Bahai
literature, it is stated thus:

....The spirit of tolerance and assimilation are the hall marks of this civilization. Never has the
question of communal harmony and social integration raised such a wide range of emotions as
today...

xxxxx xxxx Fear, suspicion and hatred are the fuel which feed the flame of communal disharmony
and conflict. Though the Indian masses would prefer harmony between various communities, it
cannot be established through the accommodation 'separate but equal', nor through the
submergence of minority culture into majority culture whatever that may be....

Lasting harmbny between heterogenes communities can only come through a recognition of the
oneness of mankind, a realization that differences that divide us along ethnic and religious lines
have no foundation. Just as there are no boundaries drawn on the earth of separate nations,
distinctions of social, economic, ethnic and religious identity imposed by peoples are artificial; they
have only benefitted those with vested interests. On the other hand, naturally occurring of diverse
regions of the planet, or the country, such as mountain and plains, each have unique benefits! The

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 39


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

diversity created by God has infinite value, while distinctions imposed by man have no substance.

96. We conclude with the fervent hope that communal harmony, peace and tranquillity would soon
descend in the land of Mahatma Gandhi, Father of the nation, whose favourite bhajan (hymn) was -

bZ'oj vYykg rsjk uke lcdks lUefr ns Hkxoku "Ishwar and Allah are both your name, Oh God, Grant
this wisdom to all."

97. We do hope that the people of India would remember the gospel he preached and practised, and
live up to his ideals. "Better late than never". :

CONCLUSIONS

98. As a result of the above discussion, our conclusions, to be read with the discussion, are as follows
:-

(l)(a) Sub-section (3) of Section 4 of the. Act abates all pending suits and legal proceedings without
providing for an alternative dispute resolution mechanism for resolution of the dispute between the
parties thereto. This is an extinction of the judicial remedy for resolution of the dispute amounting
to negation of rule of law. Sub-section (3) of Section 4 of the Act is, therefore, unconstitutional and
invalid.

(1 )(b) The remaining provisions of the Act do not suffer from any invalidity on the construction
made thereof by us. Sub-section (3) of Section 4 of the Act is severable from the remaining Act.
Accordingly, the challenge to the constitutional validity of the remaining Act, except for Sub-section
(3) of Section 4, is rejected.

(2) Irrespective of the status of a mosque under the Muslim law applicable in the Islamic countries,
the status of a mosque under the Mahomedan Law applicable in secular India is the same and equal
to that of any other place of worship of any religion; and it does not enjoy any greater immunity
from acquisition in exercise of the sovereign or prerogative power of the State, than that of the
places of worship of the other religions.

(3) The pending suits and other proceedings relating to the disputed area within which the structure
(including the premises of the inner and outer courtyards of such structure), commonly known as
the Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Makjid, stood, stand revived for adjudication of the dispute therein,
together with the interim orders made, except to the extent the interim orders stand modified by the
provisions of Section 7 of the Act.

(4) The vesting of the said disputed area in the Central Government by virtue of Section 3 of the Act
is limited, as a statutory receiver, with the duty for it management and administration according to
Section 7 requiring maintenance of status quo therein under Sub-section (2) of Section 7 of the Act.
The duty of the Central Government as the statutory receiver is to hand over the disputed area in
accordance with Section 6 of the Act, in terms of the adjudication made in the suits for

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 40


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

implementation of the final decision therein. This is the purpose for: which the disputed area has
been so acquired.

(5) The power of the courts in making further interim orders in the suits is limited to, and
circumscribed by, the area outside the ambit of Section 7 of the Act.

(6) The vesting of the adjacent area, other than the disputed area, acquired by the Act in the Central
Government by virtue of Section 3 of the Act is absolute with the power of management and
administration thereof in accordance with Sub-section (1) of Section 7 of the Act, till its further
vesting in any authority or other body or trustees of any trust in accordance with Section 6 of the
Act. The further vesting of the adjacent area, other than the disputed area, in accordance with
Section 6 of the Act has to be made at the time and in the manner indicated, in view of the purpose
of its acquisition.

(7) The meaning of the word "vest" in Section 3 and Section 6 of the Act has to be so understood in
the different contexts.

(8) Section 8 of the Act is meant for payment of compensation to owners of the property vesting
absolutely in the Central Government, the title to which is not in dipsute being in excess of the
disputed area which alone is the subject matter of the revived suits. It does not apply to the disputed
area, title to which has to be adjudicated in the suits and in respect of which the Central Government
is merely the statutory receiver as indicated, with the duty to restore it to the owner in terms of the
adjudication made in the suits.

(9) The challenge to acquisition of any part of the adjacent area on the ground that it is unnecessary
for achieving the professed objective of settling the long standing dispute cannot be examined at this
stage. However, the area found to be superfluous on the exact area needed for the purpose being
determined on adjudication of the dispute, must be restored to the undisputed owners.

(10) Rejection of the challenge by the undisputed owners to acquisition of some religious properties
in the vicinity of the disputed area, at this stage is with the liberty granted to, them to renew their
challenge, if necessary at a later appropriate stage, in cases of continued retention by Central
Government of their property in excess of the exact area determined to be needed on adjudication of
the dispute. .

(11) Consequently, the Special Reference No. 1 of 1993 made by the President of India under Article
143(1) of the Constitution of India is superfluous and unnecessary and does not require to be
answered. For this reason, we very respectfully decline to answer it and return the same.

(12) The questions relating to the constitutional validity of the said Act and maintainability of the
Special Reference are decided in these terms.

99. These matters are disposed of, accordingly, in the manner stated above.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 41


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

BHARUCHA, J. (for himself and on behalf of A. M. Ahmadi, J.) (Minority View) :

100. We have had the benefit of reading the erudite judgment of our learned brother, Verma, J. We
are unable to take the view expressed by him and must respectfully dissent,

101. It is convenient to deal with the validity of The Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act,
1993, and the maintainability of the Presidential Reference dated 7th January, 1993 under Article
143(1) of the Constitution of India in a common opinion.

102. The historical background, as now set out, is drawn from the White Paper on Ayodhya issued
by the Government of India in February, 1993. This was the. basis upon which the Bill to bring the
said Act upon the statute book was prepared and the Reference was made. <

103. "Ayodhya...has long been a place of holy pilgrimage because of its mention in the epic
Ramayana as the place of birth of Shri Ram. The structure commonly known as Ram Janma
Bhoomi-Babri Masjid was erected as a mosque by Mir Baqi in Ayodhya in 1528 AD. It is claimed by
some sections that it was built at the site believed to be the birth-spot of Shri Ram where a temple
had stood earlier". (Para 1.1 of the White Paper.) The disputed structure was used by the Muslims
for offering prayers until the night of 22nd/23rd December, 1949, "when Hindu idols were placed
under the central dome of the main portion of the disputed structure. Worship of these idols was
started on a big scale from the next morning. As this was likely to disturb the public peace the civil
administration attached the premises under the provisions of Section 145 of the Criminal Procedure
Code. This was the starting point of a whole chain of events which ultimately led to the demolition of
the structure" (Paras 2.13 and 2.15). In 1950 two suits were filed by Hindu gentlemen; in one of
these suits, in January, 1950, the Civil Judge concerned passed interim orders whereby the ' idols
remained in place and puja continued. The interim order was confirmed by the High Court in April,
1955. On 1st February, 1986, the District Judge concerned ordered the opening of the locks upon the
disputed structure and permitted puja by devotees. In 1959 a suit was filed claiming title to the
disputed structure by the Nirmohi Akhara. In 1961 another suit was filed claiming title to the
disputed structure by the Sunni Central Wakf Board. In 1989 Devki Nandan Agarwal as the next
friend of the deity, that is to say, the said idols, filed a title suit in respect of the disputed structure.
In 1989 the suits aforementioned were transferred to the Allahabad High Court and were ordered to
be heard together. On 14th August, 1989, the High Court ordered the maintenance of status quo in
respect of the disputed structure. (Appendix I to the White Paper.) "The controversy entered a new
phase with the placing of idols in the disputed structure in December, 1949. The premises were
attached under Section 145 of the CrPC. Civil suits were filed shortty thereafter. The interim orders
in these civil suits restrained the parties from removing the idols or interfering with their worship.
In effect, therefore, from December, 1949 till December, 1992 the structure had not been used as a
mosque". (Para 1.2). On 6th December, 1992, the disputed structure was demolished. "The
demolition...was a most reprehensible act. The perpetrators of this deed struck not only against a
place of worship but also at the principles of secularism, democracy and the rule of law...." (Para
1.35). At 6.45 p.m. on that day the idols were replaced where the disputed structure had stood and
by 7.30 p.m. work had started on the construction of a temporary structure for them (Para 1.20). At
about 9.10 p.m. the President of India issued a proclamation under the provisions of Article 356

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 42


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

assuming to himself all the functions of the Government of Uttar Pradesh and dissolving its Vidhan
Sabha (Paragraph 1.21).

104. A structure called the Ram Chabutra stood on the disputed site, within the courtyard of the
disputed structure. This structure was also demolished on 6th December, 1992 (Appendix V of the
White Paper). As a result, worship by the Hindus thereat, which, it appears, had been going on for a
considerable period of time without objection by the Muslims, came to an end.

105. After the imposition of President's Rule, the Central Government took, inter alia, the following
decisions: "the Government will see to it that the demolished structure is re-built; and appropriate
steps will be taken regarding new Ram temple" (Para 1.22).

106. On 27th December, 1992, the aforesaid decisions taken on 7th December, 1992, "to re-build the
demolished structure and to take appropriate steps regarding new Ram temple" were
"elaborated...as follows:

The Government has decided to acquire all areas in dispute in the suits pending in the Allahabad
High Court. It has also been decided to acquire suitable adjacent area. The acquired area excluding
the area on which the disputed structure stood would be made available to two trusts which would
be set up for construction of a Ram Temple and a Mosque respectively and for planned development
of the area.

The Government of India has also decided to request the President to seek the opinion of the
Supreme Court on the question whether there was a Hindu temple existing on the site where the
disputed structure stood. The Government has also decided to abide by the opinion of the Supreme
Court and to take appropriate steps to enforce the Court's opinion. Notwithstanding the acquisition
of the disputed area, the Government would ensure that the position existing prior to the
promulgation of the Ordinance is maintained until such time as the Supreme Court gives its opinion
in the matter. Thereafter the rights of the parties shall be determined in the light of the Court's
opinion"

107-109. An Ordinance, which was replaced by the said Act, was issued on 7th January, 1993. The
Reference under Article 143 was made on the same day. We shall refer to the provisions of the Act
later. For the present, it is necessary to set out the Reference in full:

WHEREAS a dispute has arisen whether a Hindu temple or any Hindu religious structure existed
prior to the construction of the structure (including the premises of the inner and outer courtyards
of such structure), commonly known as the Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid, in the area in which
the structure stood in village Kot Ramachandra in Ayodhya, in Pargana Haveli Avadh, in Tehsil
Faizabad Sadar, in the district of Faizabad of the State of Uttar Pradesh;

2. AND WHEREAS the said area is located in Revenue Plot Nos. 159 and 160 in the said village Kot
Ramachandra;

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 43


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

3. AND WHEREAS the said dispute has affected the maintenance of public order and harmony
between different communities in the country;

4. AND WHEREAS the aforesaid area vests in the Central Government by virtue of the Acquisition
of Certain Area at Ayodhya Ordinance, 1993;

5. AND WHEREAS notwithstanding the vesting of the aforesaid area in the Central Government
under the said Ordinance the Central Government proposes to settle the said dispute after obtaining
the opinion of the Supreme Court of India and in terms of the said opinion;

6. AND WHEREAS in view of what has been hereinbefore stated it appears to me that the question
hereinafter set out has arisen and is of such a nature and of such public importance that it is
expedient to obtain the opinion of the Supreme Court of India thereon;

7. NOW, THEREFORE, in exercise of the powers conferred/upon me by Clause (1) of Article 143 of
the Constitution of India, I, Shanker Dayal Sharma, President of India, hereby refer the following
question to the Supreme Court of India for consideration and opinion thereon, namely, Whether a
Hindu temple or any Hindu religious structure existed prior to the construction of the Ram Janma
Bhumi-Babri Masjid (including the premises of the inner and outer courtyards of such structure) in
the area on which the structure stood ?

110. It will be seen that the fifth recital of the Reference states that "the Central Government
proposes to settle the said dispute after obtaining the opinion of the Supreme Court of India and -in
terms of the said opinion". The learned Solicitor General, appearing for the Central Government,
sub-mitted that this meant that the Central Government "was committed to bring about a
settlement in the light of the Supreme Court" opinion and consistent therewith. However, at this
stage it cannot be predicated as to the precise manner in which progress towards a. solution could
be made". If, he submitted orally, no amicable solution was reached, the Central Government would
take steps to enforce the Supreme Court's opinion. To avoid ambiguity, the learned Solicitor General
was asked to take instructions and put in writing the Central Government's position in this behalf; if
the answer to the question posed by the Reference was that no Hindu temple or religious structure
had stood on the disputed site prior to the construction of the disputed structure, would the
disputed structure be re-built? On 14th September, 1994, the learned Solicitor General made the
following statement in response :

Government stands by the policy of secularism and of even-handed treatment of all religious
communities. The Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act, 1993, as well as the Presidential
Reference, have the objective of maintaining public order and promoting communal harmony and
the spirit of common brotherhood amongst the people of India.

Government is committed to the construction of a Ram temple and a mosque, but their actual
location will be determined only after the Supreme Court renders its opinion in the Presidential
Reference.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 44


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

Government will treat the finding of the Supreme Court on the question of fact referred under
Article 143 of the Constitution as a verdict which is final and binding.

In the light of the Supreme Court's opinion and consistent with it, Government will make efforts to
resolve the controversy by a process of negotiations. Government is confident that the opinion of the
Supreme Court will have a salutary effect on the attitudes of the communities and they will no
longer take conflicting positions on the factual issue settled by the Supreme Court.

If efforts at a negotiated settlement as aforesaid do not succeed, Government is committed to


enforce a solution in the light of the Supreme Court's opinion and consistent with it, Government's
action in this regard will be even-handed in respect of both the communities. If the question
referred is answered in the affirmative, namely, that a Hindu temple/structure did exist prior to the
construction of the demolished structure, Government action will be in support of the wishes of the
Hindu community. If, on the other hand, the question is answered in the negative, namely, that no
such Hindu temple/ structure existed at the relevant time, then Government action will be in
support of the wishes of the Muslim community.

111. The learned Solicitor General was asked to clarify whether the Central Government proposed to
act in support of either community's wishes as presently known or as ascertained after the answer to
the Reference was given and negotiations had failed. The learned Solicitor General was unable to get
instructions in this behalf from the Central Government. It is fair to say that he had not much time
to do so as the arguments were closed on the day after the clarification was sought.

112. It is relevant now to refer to the content of the dispute. "At the center of the dispute is the
demand voiced by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and its allied organisations for the restoration
of a site said to be the birth place of Shri Ram in Ayodhya. Till 6th December, 1992, this site was
occupied by the structure erected in 1528 by Mir Baqi who claimed to have built it on orders of the
first Mughal Emperor Babar". "The VHP and its allied organisations based their demand on the
assertion that this site is the birth place of Shri Ram and a Hindu temple commemorating this site
stood here till it was destroyed on Babar's command and a masjid was erected in its place". "During
the negotiations aimed at finding an amicable solution to the dispute one issue which came to the
fore was whether a Hindu temple had existed on the site occupied by the disputed structure and
whether it was demolished on Babar's order for the construction of the masjid.... It was stated by
certain Muslim leaders that if these assertions were proved, the Muslims would voluntarily hand
over the disputed shrine to the Hindus" (Paras 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3 of the White Paper).

113. The Statement of Objects and Reasons for the Act states:

It was considered necessary to acquire the site of the disputed structure and suitable adjacent land
for setting up a complex which could be developed in a planned manner wherein a Ram temple, a
mosque, amenities for pilgrims, a library, museum and other suitable facilities can be set up.

114. The Act has been placed on the statute book to provide for the acquisition of "certain area at
Ayodhya and for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto". The Act recites that there had

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 45


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

"been a long standing dispute" relating to the structure aforementioned which had affected the
maintenance of public order and harmony between different communities in the country. It was
"necessary to maintain public order and promote communal harmony and the spirit of common
brotherhood among the people of India". It was necessary to acquire certain areas in Ayodhya "with
a view to achieve the aforesaid objectives".

115. The Act, by reason of Section 1(2), is deemed to have come into force on 7th January, 1993
(which is the date on which the Ordinance was passed). Section 2(a) defines "area" to mean the area
specified in the Schedule to the Act, including the buildings, structures or other properties
comprised therein. Section 2(b) defines "authorised person" to mean "a person or body of persons
or trustees of any trust authorised by the Central Government under Section 7".

116. By reason of Section 3, on and from the commencement of the Act, the right, title and interest
in relation to the area stands transferred to and vests in the Central Government.

117. Section 4(1) states that the "area shall be deemed to include all assets, rights, leaseholds,
powers, authority and privileges and all property, movable and immovable, ...and all other rights
and interests in or arising out of such properties as were immediately before the commencement of
this Act in the ownership or control of any person or the State Government...and all registers, maps,
plans, drawings and other documents of whatever nature relating thereto". By reason of Section 4(2)
all the properties which have vested in the Central Government under Section 3 shall, by the force of
such vesting, stand freed and discharged from any trust, obligation, mortgage, charge, lien and all
other encumbrances affecting them and any attachment, injunction, decree or order of any Court or
Tribunal or other authority restricting the use of such properties in any manner or appointing any
receiver in respect of the whole or any part of such properties shall cease to have any effect. Section
4(3) states that any suit, appeal or other proceedings in respect of the right, title and interest
relating to any property which is vested in the Central Government under Section 3 which was
pending before any Court, Tribunal or other authority on the date of the commencement of the Act
"shall abate".

118. Section 5 empowers the Central Government to take all steps necessary to secure the possession
of the area that vests in it.

Section 6 reads thus:

(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in Sections 3, 4, 5 and 7, the Central Government may, if it
is satisfied that any authority or other body, or trustees of any trust, set up on or after the
commencement of this Act is or are willing to comply with such terms and conditions as that
Government may think fit to impose, direct by notification in the Official Gazette, that the right, title
and interest or any of them in relation to the area or any part thereof, instead of continuing to vest
in the Central Government, vest in that authority or body of trustees of that trust either on the date
of the notification or on such later date as may be specified in the notification.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 46


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

(2) When any right, title and interest in relation to the area or part thereof vest in the authority or
body or trustees referred to in Sub-section (1), such rights of the Central Government in relation to
such area or part thereof, shall, on and from the date of such vesting, be deemed to have become the
rights of that authority or body or trustees of that trust, (3) The provisions of Sections 4, 5, 7 and 11
shall, so far as may be, apply in relation to the Central Government and for this purpose references
therein to the Central Government shall be construed as references to such authority or body or
trustees.

119. Section 7 is the only section under the Chapter entitled "Management and Administration of
Property", and it reads thus:

(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in any contract or instrument or order of any Court,
Tribunal or other authority to the contrary, on and from the commencement of this Act, the
property vested in the Central Government under Section 3 shall be managed by the Central
Government or by a person or body of persons or trustees of any trust authorised by that
Government in this behalf.

(2) In managing the property vested in the Central Government under Section 3, the Central
Government or the authorised person shall ensure that the position existing before the
commencement of this Act in the area on which the structure (including the premises of the inner
and outer courtyards of such structure), commonly known as the Ram Janma Bhumi-Babri Masjid,
stood in village Kot Ramachandra in Ayodhya, in Pargana Haveli Avadh, in Tehsil Faizabad Sadar,
in the district of Faizabad of the State of Uttar Pradesh is maintained.

120. By reason of Section 8 of the owner of any land, building, structure or other property comprised
in the "area" shall be given by the Central Government in cash an amount equivalent to the market
value of the land, building, structure or other property that has been transferred to and vests in the
Central Government under Section 3. For the purpose of deciding the claim of the owner, the
Central Government is to appoint a Claims Commissioner. Claims are required to be made within a
period of 90 days from the date of the commencement of the Act.

121. Section 9 makes it clear that the provisions of the Act would have effect notwithstanding
anything inconsistent therewith contained in any other law for the time being in force or any
instrument having effect by virtue of any law other than the Act or any decree or order of any Court,
Tribunal or other authority. Section 10 provides for penalties for non-compliance with the
provisions of the Act. Section 11 provides for protection for action taken in good faith under the Act.
Section 12 empowers the Central Government to make rules to carry out the provisions of the Act.
By reason of Section 13 the Ordinance repealed.

The Act may now be analysed.

122. "Area" under Section 2(a) of the Act is that specified in the Schedule. Again, "area" under
Section 3 is that specified in the Schedule. "Area", by reason of Section 4(1), includes assets and all
property, movable and immovable, and all other rights and interests in or arising out of such

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 47


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

property. "Area", in other words, includes the whole bundle of movable and immovable property in
the area specified in the Schedule and all other rights and interests therein or arising thereout. The
whole bundle of property and rights vests, by reason of Section 4(2), in the Central Government
freed and discharged from all encumbrances.

123. Section 7(1) speaks of property vested in the Central Government under Section 3. It, therefore,
speaks of the whole bundle of property and rights. These are to be managed by the Central
Government or any person or body of persons or trustees of any trust so authorised. In managing
the whole bundle of property and rights "the Central Government or the authorised person shall
ensure that the position existing before the commencement of this Act in the area on which the
structure (including the premises of the inner and outer courtyards) ...stood...is maintained". This
provision in Section 7(2) relates only to that part of the area upon which the disputed structure
stood (the disputed site).

124. Now, as to the "authorised person", Section 7(1) says that the whole bundle of property and
rights shall be managed by the Central Government or by a person or body of persons or trustees of
any trust authorised by the Central Government. This, as Section 7(2) shows, is the "authorised
person" under Section 2(b). He or it may not be the authority or other body or trustees referred to in
Section 6(1). In other words; the power to manage the whole bundle of property and rights may be
conferred upon any person or body of persons or trustees of any trust even though he or they are not
required to comply with the terms and conditions that the Central Government may deem fit to
impose under Section 6(1).

125. "In managing the property vested in the Central Government under Section 3" (which, read
with Section 4(1), means the whole bundle of property and rights) "the Central Government or the
authorised person shall ensure that the position existing before the commencement of this Act in the
area on which the structure (including the premises of the inner and outer courtyards of such
structure) ...stood...is maintained".

This provision in Section 7(2) speaks of "the position existing before the commencement of this
Act", i.e., existing before midnight on the night of 6th/7th January, 1993. This provision, therefore,
requires the Central Government or the authorised person to ensure, in managing the whole bundle
of property and rights, that the position existing on the disputed site before midnight on the night of
6th/7th January, 1993, is maintained.

126. The obligation is cast in regard to the "management" of the whole bundle of property and
rights. This implies that the Central Government or the authorised person is required to continue
with the puja that was being performed on the disputed site before 7th January, 1993. This is
provided for even though, by reason of Section 4(2), the orders of the court in this behalf cease to
have effect.

127. There is no provision in the Act which indicates in clear terms that what use the whole bundle
of property and rights, including the disputed site, will be put to by the Central Government. An
indication in this behalf is provided by Section 6. Section 6 is an enabling provision. By reason of

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 48


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

Section 6(1), notwithstanding the vesting in the Central Government of the whole bundle of property
and rights, "the Central Government may, if it is satisfied that any authority or other body or
trustees of any trust set up on or after the commencement of this Act is or are willing to comply with
such terms, and conditions as that Government might think fit to impose direct...that the right, title
and interest or any of them" in relation to the whole bundle of property or rights or any part thereof,
instead of continuing to vest in the Central Government, shall vest in that authority or body or
trustees of that trust. Thereupon, by reason of Section 6(2), the rights of the Central Government in
the whole bundle of property and rights or such part thereof as has been vested under Section 6(1)
shall, on and from the date of such vesting, be deemed to have become the rights of the authority or
body or trustees of that trust. In other words, when the vesting takes place in respect of the whole
bundle of property and rights or of any part thereof, all the rights of the Central Government in the
whole bundle of property and rights or such part thereof as has been vested, shall be deemed to be
transferred to the authority or body or trust in which it is vested.

128. The provisions of Section 6 apply to the whole bundle of property and rights; that is to say, they
apply also to the disputed site. The disputed site may also be vested in an authority or body or trust
that is willing to comply with the terms and conditions that the Central Government might think fit
to impose. Those terms and conditions are not specified in the Act, nor is there any indication in
that behalf available. The only restriction imposed upon such authority or body or trust, apart from
the terms and conditions that the Central Government may think fit to impose, are those provided in
Section 7. This is set out in Section 6(3). The provisions of Sections 4, 5 and 11 which are also
mentioned in Section 6(3) are provisions that empower and protect the authority or body or trust.

129. Section 7 relates to the management and administration of the whole bundle of property and
rights. Section 7(1) states that it shall be managed by the Central Government or by a body of
persons or trustees of any trust authorised by the Government in this behalf; in other words, the
authorised person. Section 7(2) obliges the Central Government or the authorised person, in
managing the whole bundle of property and rights, to ensure that "the position existing" before the
commencement of the Act in the area on which the disputed structure stood "is maintained". The
Central Government or the authorised person is, therefore, obliged to maintain the "position" in
respect of the disputed site as it was before midnight on the night of 6th/7th January, 1993, and it is
required to do so in "managing" the whole bundle of property and rights. This implies not only that
the debris of the demolished structure must be maintained as it stands but also that the idols which
had been placed on the disputed site after the demolition had taken place must be retained where
they are and the puja carried on before them must be continued.

130. Since the Act does not spell out the use to which the whole bundle of property and rights is
intended to be put and since the provisions of Section 7 are applicable even to the authority or body
or trust in which the Central Government may vest the whole bundle of property and rights or any
part thereof under the provisions of Section 6, it is possible to read the provisions of Section 7 as
being of a permanent nature. The Act read by itself, therefore, suggests that the idols shall remain
on the disputed site for an indefinite period of time and puja shall continue to be performed before
them.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 49


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

131. Section 8 gives to the owner of any land, building, structure or other property which is acquired
compensation equivalent to the market value thereof. Claims in that behalf are to be entertained by
a Claims Commissioner to be appointed by the Central Government. For the purposes of
establishing his claim, the owner would have to establish his title to the property that has been
acquired. The suits in the Allahabd High Court which abate by reason of Section 4(3) relate to the
title of the disputed site. In other words, the forum for the adjudication of the title to the disputed
site is shifted from the Courts to the Claims Commissioner.

132. The above is an analysis of the Act by itself. It is necessary to read it also in the context of its
Statement of Objects and Reasons and the Reference.

133. The Statement of Objects and Reasons states that the acquisition of the whole bundle of
property and rights is necessary for setting up a planned complex housing "a Ram temple, a mosque,
amenities for pilgrims, a library, museum and other suitable facilities". The authority or other body
or trustees of any trust willing to comply with such terms arid conditions as the Central Government
may think fit to impose would, under the provisions of Section 6, be vested with a part of the whole
bundle of property and rights to construct and maintain a Ram temple and concomitant amenities.
Another authority or body or trust so willing would be vested with another part of the whole bundle
of property and rights to construct and maintain a mosque and concomitant facilities. So read, the
provisions relating to the management and administration of the whole bundle of property and
rights contained in Section 7 are interim provisions, to operate until vesting under Section 6 has
taken place.

134. Having regard to the provisions of Section 6, the Statement of Objects and Reasons and the
Reference; the acquisition of the disputed site and surrounding land is to hold the same pending the
resolution of the dispute regarding the disputed site. The resolution of the dispute is to take place in
the manner stated in the Reference. Upon such resolution the disputed site would be handed over
for the construction of a mosque or a Ram temple, as the case may be, and the surrounding area
would house a place of worship of the other religion and ancilliary facilities for the places of worship
of both the Muslim and the Hindu communities. The validity of the provisions of Section 3, by
reason of which the whole bundle of property and rights stands transferred to and vests in the
Central Government, and, therefore, of the Act itself, depends upon the validity of the provisions
that follow it, particularly, Section 4.

135. Section 4(1) states that the "area shall be deemed to include all assets, rights, leaseholds,
powers, authority and privileges and all property, movable and immovable, ...and all other rights
and interests in or arising out of such properties as were immediately before the
commencemeradeshradeshradeshnt of this Act in the ownership or control of any person or the
State Government...and all registers, maps, plans, drawings and other documents of whatever
nature relating thereto". By reason of Section 4(2) all the properties which have vested in the Central
Government under Section 3 shall, by the force of such vesting, stand freed and discharged from any
trust, obligation, mortgage, charge, lien and all other encumbrances affecting them and any
attachment, injunction, decree or order of any Court or Tribunal or other authority restricting the
use of such properties in any manner or appointing any receiver in respect of the whole or any part

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 50


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

of such properties shall cease to have any effect. Section 4(3) states that any suit, appeal or other
proceedings in respect of the right, title and interest relating to any property which is vested in the
Central Government under Section 3 which was pending before any Court, Tribunal or other
authority on the date of the commencement of the Act "shall abate". By reason of Section 8 the
owner of any land, building, structure or other property comprised in the "area" shall be given by the
Central Government in cash an amount equivalent to the market value of the land, building,
structure or other property that has been transferred to and vests in the Central Government under
Section 3. Such claims are to be decided by a Claims Commissioner, who is entitled to regulate his
own procedure.

136. As the White Paper shows, the demolished structure was built as a mosque in 1528. It was used
as a mosque from 1528 until the night of 22nd/23rd December, 1949, when the idols were placed
therein. The idols continue in the disputed structure by reason of the orders of the Courts. Under the
orders of the Court passed in 1986 public worship of the idols was permitted. This state of affairs
continued until 6th December, 1992, when the disputed structure was demolished.

137. The effect of Section 4 of the Act is that the Sunni Wakf Board, which administered the mosque
that was housed in the disputed structure, and the Muslim community lose their right to plead
adverse possession of the disputed site from 1528 until 1949, if not up-to-date, considering that the
idols remained in the disputed structure only under the orders of the courts. Instead of judicial
determination of the title to the disputed site on the basis of the law, the disputed site, along with
surrounding land, has been acquired and a complex with a mosque and a temple thereon is;
planned. What is to happen to the disputed site is to depend upon the answer to the question posed
in the Reference and negotiations based thereon. The question posed in the Reference is : whether a
Hindu temple or any other Hindu religious structure existed prior to the construction of the
disputed structure on the disputed site. The learned Solicitor General fairly stated that the Court
should read the question as asking whether any Hindu temple or other Hindu religious structure
stood on the disputed site immediately before the disputed structure was built thereon. The dispute,
it will be remembered, was that a Ram temple had stood on the disputed site and it was demolished
to make place for the disputed structure; the question posed, however, is was there "a Hindu temple
or any Hindu religious structure" on the disputed site. Secondly, the salient fact as to whether the
temple, if any, was demolished to make place for the disputed structure is not to be gone into. The
disputes as to title to the disputed site survive for consideration for the purpose of award of
compensation. For this purpose title shall have to be established not before a Court of law but before
a Claims Commissioner to be appointed by the Central Government, who is entitled to devise his
own procedure. No right of appeal or reference to a Civil Court is provided for with the result that
the decision of the Claims Commissioner would be final except for a remedy under Articles 226/227
of the Constitution. For the reasons aforesaid, the provisions of Sections 4 and 8 of the Act must be
held to be arbitrary and unreasonable.

138. More importantly, the provisions of Section 4 of the Act, inasmuch as they deprive the Sunni
Wakf Board and the Muslim community of the right to plead and establish adverse possession as
aforesaid and restrict the redress of their grievance in respect of the disputed site to the answer to
the limited question posed by the Reference and to negotiations subsequent thereto, and the

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 51


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

provisions of Section 3 of the Act, which vest the whole bundle of property and rights in the Central
Government to achieve this purpose, offend the principle of secularism, which is a part of the basic
structure of the Constitution, being slanted in favour of one religious community as against another.

139. That secularism is a part of the basic features of the Constitution, was held in Kesavananda
Bharati v. State of Kerala . It was unanimously reaffirmed by the nine-Judge Bench of this Court in
S.R. Bommai v. Union of India . Sawant, J. analysed the Preamble of the Constitution and various
articles therein and held that these provisions, by implication, prohibited the establishment of a
theocratic State and prevented the State from either identifying itself with or favouring any
particular religion. The State was enjoined to accord equal treatment to all religions. K.
Ramaswamy, J. quoted the words written by Gandhiji that are as apposite now as they were when he
wrote them : "The Allah of Muslims is the same as the God of Christians and Ishwara of Hindus". B.
P. Jeevan Reddy, J. said (at p. 3152 of AIR):

While the citizens of this country are free to profess, practice and propagate- such religion, faith or
belief as they choose, so far as the State is concerned, i.e., from the point of view of the State, the
religion, faith or belief of a person is immaterial. To it, all are equal and all are entitled to be treated
equally. How is this equal treatment possible, if the State were to prefer or promote a particular
religion, race or caste, which necessarily means a less favourable treatment of all other religions,
races and castes. How are the constitutional promises. of social justice liberty of belief, faith or
worship and equality of status and of opportunity to be attained unless the State eschews the
religion, faith or belief of a person from its consideration altogether while dealing with him, his
rights, his duties and his entitlements? Secularism is thus more than a passive attitude of religious
tolerance. It is a positive concept of equal treatment of all religions. This attitude is described by
some as one of neutrality towards religion or as one of benevolent neutrality. This may be a concept
evolved by Western liberal thought or it may be, as some say, an abiding faith with the Indian people
at all points of time. That is pot material. What is material is that it is a, constitutional goal and a
basic feature of the Constitution as affirmed in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala and Indira N.
Gandhi v. Raj Narain . Any step inconsistent with this constitutional policy is in plain words,
unconstitutional.

The State has no religion. The State is bound to honour and to Wold the scales even between all
religions. It may not advance the cause of one religion to the detriment of another.

140. The core provisions of the Act are Sections 3, 4 and 8. The other provisions of the Act are only
ancillary and incidental to Sections 3, 4 and 8. Since the core provisions of Sections 3, 4 and 8 are
unconstitutional, the Act itself cannot stand.

141. The provisions of Section 7 are referred to in support of the finding that the Act is skewed to
favour one religion against another.

142. The provisions of Section 7(1) empower the Central Government to entrust the management of
the acquired area to "any person or body of persons or trustees of any trust". Section 7(2) states that
"in managing the property vested in the Central Government under Section 3 the Central

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 52


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

Government or the authorised person...shall ensure that the position existing before the
commencement of this Act in the area on which" the disputed structure "stood ...is maintained ". It
is relevant to note that "the position" is required to be maintained in the course of "managing the
property". Before "the commencement of this Act" the disputed structure had been demolished, the
idols had been placed on the disputed site and puja thereof had begun. Section 7(2), therefore,
requires that the puja must continue so long as the management continues. For how long such
management, to continue and on the happening on what event it will come to end is not indicated.
Section 7(2), thus, perpetuates the performance of puja on the disputed site. No account is taken of
the fact that the structure thereon had been destroyed in "a most reprehensible act. The perpetrators
of this deed struck not only against a place of worship but at the principles of secularism, democracy
and the rule of law ..."(White Paper, para 1.35). No account is taken of the fact that there is a dispute
in respect of the site on which puja is to be performed; that, as stated in the White Paper, until the
night of 22nd/23rd December, 1949, when the idols were placed in the disputed structure, the
disputed structure was being used as a mosque; and that the Muslim community has a claim to offer
namaaz thereon.

143. Reference was made in the course of the proceedings to the provisions of the Places of Worship
Special Provisions Act, 1991. It is a statute to prohibit the conversion of any place of worship and to
provide for the maintenance of the religious character of any place of worship as it existed on 15th
August, 1947. It enjoins that no person shall convert any place of worship of any religious
denomination or any section thereof into a place of worship of a different section of the same
religious denomination or of a different religious denomination or any section thereof. It declares
that the religious character of a place of worship existing on 15th August, 1947, shall continue to be
the same as it existed on that date. It is specified that nothing contained in the statute shall apply to
the place of worship which was the disputed structure at Ayodhya and to any suit, appeal or other
proceedings relating to it. Based upon The Places of Worship Act, it was submitted that what had
happened at Ayodhya on 6th December, 1992, could never happen again. The submission overlooks
the fact that the Indian Penal Code contains provisions in respect of offences relating to religion.
Section 295 thereof states that whoever destroys, damages or defiles any place of worship or any
object held sacred by any class of persons with the object of thereby insulting the religion of any
class of persons or with the knowledge that any class of persons is likely to consider such
destruction, damage or defilement as an insult to their religion shall be punished. Section 295
provides for punishment of a person who with the deliberate and malicious intention of outraging
the religious feelings of any class of citizens of India, by words, either spoken or written, or by signs
or by visible representation or otherwise insults or attempts to insult the religion or religious beliefs
of that class. Those who razed! the disputed structure to the ground on 6th December, 1992, were
not deterred by these provisions. Others similarly minded are as little likely to be deterred by the
provisions of the Places of Worship Act.

144. The Preamble to the Constitution of India proclaims that India is a Secular Democratic
Republic. Article 15 in Part III of the Constitution, which provides for fundamental rights, debars
the State from discriminating against any citizen on the ground of religion. Secularism is given pride
of place in the Constitution. The object is to preserve and protect all religions, to place all religious
communities on a par. When, therefore, adherents of the religion of the majority of Indian citizens

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 53


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

make a claim upon and assail the place of worship of another religion and, by dint of numbers,
create conditions that are conducive to public disorder, it is the constitutional obligation of the State
to protect that place of worship and to preserve public order, using for the purpose such means and
forces of law and order as are required. It is impermissible under the provisions of the Constitution
for the State to acquire that place of worship to preserve public order. To condone the acquisition of
a place of worship in such circumstances is to efface the principle of secularism from the
Constitution.

145. We must add a caveat. If the title to the place of worship is in dispute in a Court of law and
public order is jeopardised, two courses are open to the Central Government. It may apply to the
concerned Court to be appointed Receiver of the place of worship, to hold it secure pending the final
adjudication of its title, or it may enact legislation that makes it statutory Receiver of the place of
worship pending the adjudication of its title by the concerned Court. In either event, the Central
Government would bind itself to hand over the place of worship to the party in whose favour its title
is found.

146. The learned Solicitor General submitted :

When conflicting claims are made and deep sentiments are involved, a solution may hurt one or
other of the sentiments, but on that account it cannot be characterised as partial or lacking in
neutrality.

When amity and harmony between communities are threatened, it is one of the secular duties of the
State to help the parties towards a solution which the Government feels will be accepted over the
course of time, if not immediately, and which will have the effect of abating and blunting the
violence of the strife and conflict. The Act and the Reference make an attempt in the direction of
restoring amity and harmony between the communities. Their objective is secular.

We cannot, for the reasons stated above, agree.

147. A brief reference to Article 25(1) may now be made. It reads:

25. Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice and propagation of religion - (1) Subject to
public order, morality and health and to the other provisions of this Part, all persons are equally
entitled to freedom of conscience and the right freely to profess, practise and propagate religion.

Article 25(1) protects the rights of individuals. (See The Commr., Hindu Religious Endowments,
Madras v. Sri Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt, . Exercise of the right of the
individual to profess, practice and propagate religion is subject to public order. Secularism is
absolute the State may not treat religions differently on the ground that public order requires it.

148. The principle of secularism illumines the provisions of Articles 15 and 16. Article 15 obliges the
State not to discriminate against any citizen on the ground of religion. The obligation is not subject
to any restriction. Article 16(1) declares that there shall be equality of opportunity for all citizens in

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 54


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

matters relating to employment or appointment to any office under the State. Article 16(2) puts the
requirement negatively: no citizen shall on the ground of religion be ineligible for or be
discriminated against in respect of any employment or office under the State. Again, the obligation
in this behalf is not subject to any restriction. The "hands-off" approach required of the State in
matters of religion is illustrated also by Article 27, by reason whereof no person can be compelled to
pay any taxes the proceeds of which are specifically appropriated in payment of expenses for the
promotion or maintenance of any particular religion. Article 29(2) may also be noted for its absolute
terms; no citizen can be denied admission into any educational institution maintained by the State
or receiving aid out of State funds on the ground of religion.

149. This brings us to the Reference. The Act having been struck down, the suits as to the title of the
disputed site in the Allahabad High Court revive and the purpose for which the Reference was made
may be said to have become redundant. On the other hand, it may be said that the revival of the
suits does not debar the Central Government from negotiating to bring an amicable solution to the
dispute at Ayodhya and such negotiations depend upon the answer given to the question posed by
the Reference. We shall, therefore, deal with the Reference, and proceed upon the basis that it is
maintainable under the provisions of Article 143.

150. In Special Reference No. 1 of 1964, , this Court held :

It is quite true that under Article 143(1) even if questions are referred to this Court for its advisory
opinion, this Court is not bound to give such advisory opinion in every case. Article 143(1) provides
that after the questions formulated by the President are received by this Court, it may, after such
hearing as it thinks fit, report to the President its opinion thereon. The use of the word "may" in
contrast with the use of the word "shall" in the provision prescribed by Article 143(2) clearly brings
out the fact that in a given case, this Court may respectfully refuse to express its advisory opinion if
it is satisfied that it should not express its opinion having regard to the nature of the questions
forwarded to it and having regard to the other relevant facts and circumstances.

In Re the Special Courts Bill, 1978, , this Court said:

Article 143(1) is couched in broad terms which provide that any question of law or fact may be
referred by the President for the consideration of the Supreme Court if it appears to him that such a
question has arisen or is likely to arise and if the question is of such a nature and of such public
importance that it is expedient to obtain the opinion of the Court upon it. Though questions of fact
have not been referred to the Court in any of the six references made under Article 143(1), that
Article empowers the President to make a reference even on questions of fact provided the other
conditions of the article are satisfied. It is not necessary that the question on which the opinion of
the Supreme Court is sought must have arisen actually. It is competent to the President to make a
reference under Article 143(1) at an anterior stage, namely, at the stage when the President is
satisfied that the question has arisen or is likely to arise and whether it is of such a nature and of
such public importance that it is expedient to obtain the opinion of the Supreme Court upon it, is a
matter essentially for the President to decide. The plain duty and functions of the Supreme Court
under Article 143(1) of the Constitution is to consider the questions on which the President has

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 55


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

made the reference and report to the President its opinion, provided of course the question is
capable of being pronounced upon and falls within the power of the Court to decide. If, by reason of
the manner in which the question is framed or for any other appropriate reason the Court considers
it not proper or possible to answer the question it would be entitled to return the reference by
pointing out the impediments in answering it. The right of this Court to decline to answer a
reference does not flow merely out of the different phraseology used in Clauses (1) and (2) of Article
143, in the sense that Clause (1) provides that the Court "may" report to the President its opinion on
the question referred to it, while Clause (2) provides that the Court "shall" report to the President its
opinion on the question. Even in matters arising under Clause (2), though that question does not
arise in this reference, the Court may be justified in returning the reference unanswered if it finds
for a valid reason that the question is incapable of being answered. With these preliminary
observations we will consider the contentions set forth above.

This Court is, therefore, entitled to decline to answer a question posed to it under Article 143 if it
considers that it is not proper or possible to do so, but it must indicate its reasons.

151. In our view, the Reference must not be answered, for the following reasons.

152. The Act and the Reference, as stated hereinabove, favour one religious community and
disfavour another; the purpose of the Reference is, therefore, opposed to secularism and is
unconstitutional. Besides, the Reference does not serve a constitutional purpose.

153. Secondly, the fifth recital to the Reference states that "the Central Government proposes to
settle the said dispute after obtaining the opinion of the Supreme Court of India and in terms of the
said opinion". (Emphasis supplied.) It is clear that the Central Government does not propose to
settle the dispute in terms of the Court's opinion. It proposes to use the Court's opinion as a
springboard for negotiations. Resolution of the dispute as a result of such negotiations cannot be
said to be a resolution of the dispute "in terms of the said opinion". Asked to obtain instructions and
tell the Court that the mosque would be rebuilt if the question posed by the Reference was answered
in the negative, the learned Solicitor General made the statement quoted above. It leaves us in no
doubt that even in the circumstances that this Court opines that no Hindu temple or Hindu religious
structure existed on the disputed site before the disputed structure was built thereon, there is no
certainty that the mosque will be rebuilt.

154. Thirdly, there is the aspect of evidence in relation to the question referred. It is not our
suggestion that a Court of law is not competent to decide such a question. It can be done if expert
evidence of archaeologists and historians is led, and is tested in cross-examination. The principal
protagonists of the two stands are not appearing in the Reference; they will neither lead evidence
nor cross-examine. The learned Solicitor General stated that the Central Government would lead no
evidence, but it would place before the Court the material that it had collected from the two sides
during the course of earlier negotiations. The Court being ill equipped to examine and evaluate such
material, it would have to appoint experts in the field to do so, and their evaluation would go
unchallenged. Apart from the inherent inadvisability of rendering a judicial opinion on such
evaluation, the opinion would be liable to the criticism of one or both sides that it was rendered

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 56


Dr. M. Ismail Faruqui Etc, Mohd. ... vs Union Of India And Others on 24 October, 1994

without hearing them or their evidence. This would ordinarily be of no significance for they had
chosen to stay away, but this opinion is intended to create a public climate for negotiations and the
criticism would find the public ear, to say nothing of the fact that it would impair this Court's
credibility.

155. Ayodhya is a storm that will pass. The dignity and honour of the Supreme Court cannot be
compromised because of it.

156. No observation that we have made is a reflection on the referring authority. We have the
highest respect for the office of the President of India and for its present incumbent; his secular
credentials are well known.

157. Having regard to the construction that we have placed upon the Act and the Reference, it is
neither necessary nor appropriate to discuss the other challenges to their validity and
maintainability, respectively. It may, however, be said that we found the argument that the Act was
public order legislation and, therefore, beyond the competence of Parliament very plausible.

158. We are indebted to the learned Attorney General for the assistance that he has rendered to the
Court. We are indebted to counsel who have appeared in these matters; if we single out Mr. R.K.
Garg, it is because of his untimely demise.

159. Before we pass final orders, some observations of a general nature appear to be in order.
Hinduism is a tolerant faith. It is that tolerance that has enabled Islam, Christianity,
Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism to find shelter and support upon this
land. We have no doubt that the moderate Hindu has little taste for the tearing down of the place of
worship of another to replace it with a temple. It is our fervent hope that that moderate opinion
shall find general expression and that communal brotherhood shall bring to the dispute at Ayodhya
an amicable solution long before the Courts resolve it.

160. To quote Gandhiji again, "India cannot cease to be one nation because people belonging to
different religions live in it....

In no part of the world are one nationality and one religion synonymous terms, nor has it ever been
so in India.

161. The Acquisition of Certain Area at Ayodhya Act, 1993, is struck down as being unconstitutional.
The writ petitions impugning the validity of the Act are allowed. The issues in the suits in the
Allahabad High Court withdrawn for trial to this Court are answered accordingly.

162. The Presidential Reference is returned respectfully, unanswered. 163. There shall be no order as
to costs.

Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon.org/doc/37494799/ 57

You might also like